People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXIII
No.
27 July 05, 2009 |
Peru�s Indigenous
Peoples
Victory Against
Globalisation
Raghu
ON June 19, 2009 this year,
The repeal by the Peruvian
Congress, and offers to
resign by president Garcia and by the entire cabinet led by prime
minister
Yehude Simon, represents a huge victory against capitalist
globalisation, a
victory not only for the indigenous peoples of Peru but also for people
elsewhere in the world struggling for traditional rights in forest and
other
lands. It also brings into sharp focus the issue of environmental
degradation
especially of tropical rainforests, and the intimate connection between
protection of forests and of the rights of those who live in or near
forests
and act as custodians of the world�s major carbon sinks which absorb
carbon
dioxide emissions and therefore form a crucial part of the global
battle
against climate change.
Yet there is nothing permanent
about this victory. The
seeds of its undoing remain for, while the decrees themselves have been
suspended, they have not been fully withdrawn. Pressures will continue
to build
from powerful MNCs and from the governments of the
Indeed, the entire struggle
brings up many of the old,
familiar issues and conundrums about environment versus development,
�national
interests� versus interests of its peoples or even sections of its
people, local
versus foreign control over natural resources, land rights of
indigenous
peoples or other traditional rights versus �modern� property rights and
�rights� usurped by the State.
UP TO MNCs
President Garcia himself has a
rather notorious past.
He held the highest Peruvian office earlier too in the �80s. Garcia
presided
over a massacre of inmates in Lima�s prison at a time when the
�Socialist
International� to which his American Popular Revolutionary Alliance
(APRA)
party belonged was holding a conference in the Peruvian capital, left
Peru
facing an inflation of over 8000 per cent when he left office in 1990,
and prepared
the ground for over a decade of corrupt dictatorship by Alberto
Fujimori.
Garcia returned from self-imposed exile and won the 2006 elections
against a
nationalist, pro-native peoples candidate.
Garcia�s agenda soon became
clear. He paved the way
for MNCs in Peru by a programme of often forcible displacement of small
farmers
and indigenous peoples from community lands and opened up Peru�s
forests for
mining and other extractive industries which he touted as the mantra
for Peru�s
�development�. He was instrumental in
All the while, these areas were
being seriously
degraded and rendered virtually inhabitable. Forests were denuded,
rivers and
underground water poisoned, and agricultural lands badly affected. The
government not only provided the MNCs a low tax regime but also offered
them
highly subsidised water and electricity, and suspended environmental
regulations in these fragile ecosystems. The mostly indigenous peoples
and
other small farmers living in these areas suffered a pincer attack,
caught
between degradation of their natural environment and consequent
deprivation of
livelihoods, and rising prices brought about by the massive influx of
MNC money
into the region.
THE JOINT
STRUGGLE
Among the many executive decrees
and proclamations of
this period, were two controversial ones that lay at the heart of the
massive
struggle that followed. The first of these removed about 60 per cent or
about
45 million hectares of
In fact, the government of Peru
is obliged to
undertake such consultation according to the International Labour
Organisation
(ILO) Convention 169 concerning Indigenous and
Tribal
Peoples in Independent Countries, which has been in effect since 1991
and which
was ratified by Peru in 1994 giving it validity under Peru�s
Constitution. But
more about this later.
These and other anti-people
measures were pushed
through by president Garcia�s government despite the fact that
Congressional
Committees had declared several of these decrees to be unconstitutional
and had
called for debates before formal legislation was passed. But Garcia�s
APRA party
blocked such parliamentary debates and never allowed legislation to
come up
preferring to rule by decrees instead.
In response, the various native
American or indigenous
peoples came together and launched a joint struggle under the banner of
the
Interethnic Association for the Development of the Peruvian Jungle
(AIDESEP),
which brought together 1385 indigenous communities. They held huge
protest
demonstrations and other actions culminating in a blockade of two major
national highways. On May 9 the government declared a State of
The outcry both
in
Even the
conservative press and think tanks in the USA which had been advocating
a
hard-line push for MNC mining and oil and gas exploration interests in
Peru now
began to advocate a retreat by president Garcia fearing a
radicalisation of the
Peruvian indigenous people. Indeed, at one stage AIDESEP had even
declared
their �right to insurgency� which they later withdrew while calling
upon the
government to retract the State of
EXTRACTIVE
INDUSTRIES
Often touted by governments as saviours bringing foreign investment and providing
jobs,
extractive industries such as mining, oil and gas drilling etc have had
a
terrible record worldwide. Examples from
In most other regions of the
world, the affected local
communities are relatively small, isolated and poorly organised, and
therefore
unable to resist the huge pressures brought upon them by the combined
forces of
MNCs and host governments.
In
The roots of the conflict in
Peru lies in the refusal
of the State to consult the indigenous peoples before gifting away land
that
they have lived on from time immemorial to be exploited by MNC mining
and
energy companies who have not only not provided jobs but have also
destroyed
the environment that sustained these people and their livelihoods.
Peru was among the first Latin
American countries to
legislatively protect the rights of the indigenous population through
its 1930
Constitution which recognised the right of indigenous communities over
their
ancestral lands while also granting them a reasonable level of autonomy. However, the 1993 Constitution promulgated
under Fujimori was a step backwards as regards protecting the rights
and
interests of the indigenous people and which addressed the issues of
land,
minerals and other natural resources within the neo-liberal framework
with the
State playing an active role in handing over peoples� rights to private
corporations. The decrees and legislations passed under president
Garcia took
these to another level under the US-led Free Trade Agreement.
The problem is in fact
continental in scope as similar
issues are confronting indigenous peoples throughout Latin America,
while the
predatory corporations are mostly US or Canadian with a few European
companies
thrown in for good measure. California based Occidental petroleum,
Canadian oil
giant Petrolifera, Argentina based Pluspetrol, numerous Canadian mining
companies are wreaking havoc in Peru, Colombia, Belize, Ecuador and so
on.
Today, the problem this poses
goes far beyond Latin
America. It is estimated that the Amazonian forests are about half the
world�s
forested areas and are responsible for absorbing more than 10 per cent
of total
global emissions of carbon dioxide, the major gas responsible for
global
warming. Protection of tropical rainforests are among the various
measures
being discussed round the world to tackle the climate crisis. This is
not
merely about conservation but involves many interlinked issues. Peru is
just
the latest example which shows that solutions to these problems are not
to be
found in the neo-liberal framework but must be sought in participatory
sustainable and equitable development.