| Achuar Nation Wins Landmark Agreement to Stop Toxic Contamination of Their Lands |
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| Tuesday, 24 October 2006 | |
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The Achuar nation celebrated a historic indigenous triumph yesterday over the oil industry after blockading Peru’s largest oil facility in protest over the devastating toxic contamination of their Amazonian rainforest homeland. More than 800 Achuar elders, women, and children joined the peaceful blockade, which lasted nearly two weeks, shutting down power to most of the region’s oil production facilities and blocking airport, river, and road access to the region. The protest came after two years of failed talks with Peruvian government officials over the daily discharge of more than one million barrels of “formation waters,” an untreated toxic by-product of the oil drilling process, directly into the rainforest. The dumping has been going on for three decades and the Achuar have unsafe and illegal levels of a range of toxins in their bodies, including lead and cadmium, as a result. It has also poisoned local waterways to the point where the fish and game populations on which the Achuar depend for survival are no longer fit for human consumption.
Initially, the Peruvian government sent in more than 200 members of the
national police with orders to disperse the peaceful demonstrators and restore
oil production. However, the Achuar
convinced the police to refrain from using force and respect their picket. After a weekend of intense negotiations, the
government and Pluspetrol, the Argentine oil company currently running the
concession, gave in to virtually all of the Achuar’s demands. The written
agreement they signed yesterday includes promises to:
“We have achieved
98% of our demands, and won recognition of our rights,” said Andrés Sandi, president
of FECONACO, the representative organization of the Achuar people of the Corrientes River basin. “This victory is the result of the strength of
our people who came together and pressured hard and would not abandon our
demands.”
“[F]or the first
time the Achuar communities of the Corrientes
River have been
recognized, their demands have been recognized, and [the fact that] indigenous
people live there. . . . For the first time in history, we are acting on a
national and international level. We
have advanced considerably. It is a
triumph for the first time in history that we have put a [large] company in its
place. . . “The Achuar communities continue to state that they do not want any more petroleum companies [to begin exploration or exploitation in their area], because they see now the history of what has happened to them and they do not want to have that to happen again through the granting of new petroleum concessions, because what the Achuar has lived through for the last 35 or 36 years they do not want to see repeated. They already have a history [of being harmed], which is why the only thing they hope for is that no more petroleum concessions will be given and the Achuar are saying to the government that regardless what it does, the Achuar has spoken, and so we have made the demand and the denunciation many times to the government, but we do so again: we do not want more petroleum concessions given.” Echoing these sentiments, Petronila Chumpi, an informal Achuar woman leader, was visibly moved by what the recent struggle and success of her community: “We, as indigenous women, played a very important role, the very first time we have done so – accompanying the men and walking together with them. . . . [W]e [the women] were the ones who confronted the police, we were the ones who took the police officers’ weapons from them while the men carried on heated discussions with the police. So that was extraordinary for a woman, for a lady, to take on that kind of role . . . Many times we have acted; also [at other times] we have kept silent due to our lack of understanding as to how to confront all of those problems of intoxication [illnesses/health issues resulting from the contaminated water]. We are here, we are going to [continue to] be there walking with our brothers, with our children. . . . “This mobilization, this strength, is not only composed of women, but rather children also, and the parents, young people as well, and I say that to emphasize that for us it is very, very historic [the mobilization and successful result]. Our children will see that, [as will] our grandchildren, the children of their children, and so for us this is very important, a success demonstrating how we were able to put the brakes on the State itself and on the company [Pluspetrol] permitting them to hear our voice and in that way we can develop as an indigenous community.”
In the U.S.
and other industrialized countries, the standard industry procedure for more
than 50 years has been to re-inject all formation waters deep into the ground
precisely to prevent the kind of environmental and public health crisis
currently taking place among the Achuar communities. Oil companies operating in the Amazon and
other areas of developing nations have, however, often chosen to save money by
dumping the formation waters. Click here to download the signed agreeement (Spanish version.) |




