From the frontlines of
the battle against the global economy!
U'wa defense working group action
alert!
“We are seeking an explanation
for this ‘progress’ that goes against life. We are demanding that this
kind of progress stop, that oil exploitation in the heart of the Earth
is halted, that the deliberate bleeding of the Earth stop...we ask that
our brothers and sisters from other races and cultures unite in the struggle
that we are undertaking...we believe that this struggle has to become a
global crusade to defend life.” - Statement of the U’wa people, August,
1998
COLOMBIAN GOVERNMENT OKS
OCCIDENTAL PETROLEUM PROJECT TO DRILL ON U'WA LAND! OCTOBER 12TH CELEBRATE
INDIGENOUS PEOPLE'S DAY WITH ACTION FOR THE U'WA
Contents : 1. Action Alert
- Drilling on U'wa Land Imminent 2. Background information on the U’wa
struggle 3. Sample Letters to Oxy and Colombian Government
#1. On September 21st Colombia's
Environment Minister Juan Mayr announced he was granting a permit for Occidental
Petroleum to begin exploratory drilling on the U'wa ancestral homelands.
The U'wa have denounced the government's decision as cultural and environmental
genocide. This permit removes the final legal obstacle to Occidental's
plans to drill and pushes the U'wa one step closer to their last resort
pledge of committing mass suicide.
For several years now the
U'wa have been an inspiring symbol of ecological sanity and indigenous
resistance to the oil industry's relentless invasion of the final remote
corners of the planet. The U'wa have maintained their stand despite harassment,
intimidation, a brutal assault on their spokesperson and the murder of
three of their supporters. A worldwide solidarity movement forced Royal
Dutch Shell to withdraw from the project and has stalled the efforts of
LA-based Occidental Petroleum to begin drilling. Until now. With approval
from the Colombian government drilling on U'wa land is imminent. A global
solidarity movement is needed to pressure the Colombian government and
Occidental to cancel the project.
In Colombia where a 30 year
civil war has claimed the lives of 25,000 people this decade alone, oil
and violence spread hand in hand. Oil installations are popular targets
for the guerillas and as such bring de facto military occupations along
with the inevitable ecological devastation from ongoing bombing. For the
U'wa oil is the blood of Mother Earth and therefore to drill is the ultimate
desecration of their ancient traditions of living in peaceful balance with
the Earth.
The U'wa remain strong in
their determination to protect their culture and sacred homelands but they
need your help.
HERE ARE WAYS THAT YOU CAN
GET INVOLVED :
1)CONTACT OCCIDENTAL AND
THE COLOMBIAN GOVERNMENT (See sample letters below)
Dr. Ray R. Irani, President
and CEO Occidental Petroleum 10889 Wilshire Blv. LA, CA 90024 fax 310.443.6690
ph. 310.208.8800 email : +Los_Angeles-Communications@oxy.com
Presidente Andres Pastrana
Casa Presidencial Bogota, Colombia fax +571.334.1940 (direct) or 202.387.0176
(c/o Embassy in Washington D.C.) phone (Embassy in D.C.) 202-332-7476 E-mail:
pastrana@gov.co Environment Minister Juan Mayr can be reached at : Juan_Mayr_M@Hotmail.Com
<mailto:Juan_Mayr_M@Hotmail.Com> or Jmayr@Minamb.Gov.Co <mailto:Jmayr@Minamb.Gov.Co>
2) ORGANIZE IN YOUR COMMUNITY
FOR OCTOBER 12
We need to show Occidental
AND the Colombian government that activists around the world will stand
with the U'wa to prevent the destruction of their culture and homeland
. The best way to do this is to have a strong presence at Colombian consulates
and embassies around the world. If you live near a consulate please call
them up and ask for a meeting with the consul. Organize a vigil, demonstration
or direct action.
Colombian Consulates are
in the following North American cities as well as many national capitals
around the world :
Boston, Atlanta, New York,
San Francisco, Houston, New Orleans, Chicago, Miami, Washington D.C. Vancouver,
Ottawa, Toronto and San Juan, Puerto Rico
If you are not in a city
with a Colombian government office : * Organize fax blasts, phone zaps,
a letter writing table * Screen the 10 minute documentary "The Thin Green
Line" on the U'wa and the murder last March of U'wa Defense Working Group
founder Terry Freitas. * Organize a teach-in on the threat the U'wa face
from fossil fuel consumption and U.S. sponsered militarism. Connect the
issue to the struggles of indigenous people everywhere to defend their
homelands from resource extraction. * Reproduce U'wa communiqués
(available upon request) the background article below or publish your own
article. Write letters to the editor. Announce the issue at your local
activist gathering. Do whatever you can to spread the story of the U'wa's
inspiring resistance.
Fact sheets and other campaign
materials are available on the RAN website WWW.RAN.ORG <http://www.RAN.ORG>
Please call or email for
hard copies, additional information and to coordinate your local actions
with other supporters. Contact Patrick Reinsborough at rags@ran.org <mailto:rags@ran.org>
or call us at 415-398-4404 or 1-800-989-RAIN
3) Come to Los Angeles and
help staff campaign offices, organize and plug into local mobilizations
targeting Occidental. Contact RAN's LA office - 310-392-7656 bdoran@envirolink.org
or Amazon Watch - 310-456-1340 asoltani@igc.org
Please take action
now. It is nothing less than a matter of life or death for the U'wa.
###
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#2. BACKGROUND ON THE U'WA PEOPLE
AND THEIR CAMPAIGN
"We will in no
way sell our Mother Earth, to do so would be to give up our work of collaborating
with the spirits to protect the heart of the world, which sustains and
gives life to the rest of the universe, it would be to go against our own
origins, and those of all existence." - Statement of the U'wa People, August
1998
The U’wa of the Colombian
cloud forest are in a life-and-death struggle to protect their traditional
culture and sacred homeland from an oil project slated to begin on their
land at anytime. The U’wa are adamantly opposed to the drilling and warn
that the project will lead to an increase in violence as seen in other
oil regions of Colombia. Despite this, Los Angeles-based Occidental Petroleum
and the Colombian government continue to move forward with plans to drill.
The U’wa have made a call for international support; now is the time for
us to answer.
The U’wa’s opposition to
the oil project is so strong that they have vowed to commit collective
suicide if Occidental Petroleum and the Colombian government proceed with
the project on their ancestral lands. The U’wa, a traditional people some
5,000 members strong, explain they prefer a death by their own hand than
the slow death to their environment and culture that oil production will
bring. A core tenet of U’wa culture and spirituality is the belief that
the land that has sustained them for centuries is sacred. They strongly
believe that to permit oil exploration on these sacred lands would upset
the balance of the world. In the words of the U’wa, “Oil is the blood of
Mother Earth...to take the oil is, for us, worse than killing your own
mother. If you kill the Earth, then no one will live.”
The U’wa people’s struggle
exploded into the public arena last March witthe tragic murders in Colombia
of three indigenous rights activists: Terence Freitas, Ingrid Washinawatok
and Lahe’ane’e Gay. Terence was one the founders of the U'wa Defense Working
Group and had devoted the last two years of his life to supporting the
U’wa in their campaign to stop Occidental’s oil project, reclaim their
ancestral homeland and protect their traditional culture. Ingrid and Lahe’ane’e
were coordinating with the U’wa to launch an educational project designed
to maintain and promote the U’wa’s traditional way-of-life.
These murders and the intimidation
the U'wa have already persevered are but a harbinger of the wider physical
violence the oil project will bring to their people. Throughout Colombia,
oil and violence are linked inextricably. Occidental’s Caño Limón
pipeline, just north of U’wa territory, has been attacked by leftist guerillas
more than 600 times in its 13 years of existence, spilling some 1.7 million
barrels of crude oil into the soil and rivers. The Colombian government
has militarized oil production and pipeline zones, often persecuting local
populations the government assumes are helping the guerrillas. Oil projects
have already taken their toll on many other indigenous peoples of Colombia,
including the Yarique, Kofan and Secoya.
The current drilling plans
threaten the survival of both the U’wa and their environment. The U’wa’s
cloud forest homeland in the Sierra Nevada de Cocuy mountains near the
Venezuelan border is one of the most delicate, endangered forest ecosystems
on the planet. It is an area rich in plant and animal life unique to the
region, and the U’wa depend on the balance and bounty of the forest for
their survival. Where oil companies have operated in other regions of the
Amazon basin, cultural decay, toxic pollution, land invasions and massive
deforestation have followed.
Occidental first received
an exploration license for the 2 billion barrels oil field- the equivalent
of three months of U.S. consumption -in 1992. Since then, the U’wa have
voiced their consistent opposition to the oil project. They have taken
a variety of actions to halt the project including the filing of lawsuits
against the government in Colombia, petitioning the Organization of American
States to intervene, appealing directly with Occidental’s top executives,
and reaching out to company shareholders.
Last April U'wa representatives
came to Los Angeles to directly confront Occidental. Along with several
hundred supporters the U'wa marched on Oxy's HQ and demanded a meeting
with CEO Ray Irani. When they were refused entry activists occupied the
street in front of the building and held an inspirational rally on Oxy's
front steps. Two days later on April 30th while the U'wa spoke at Occidental's
shareholder meeting there were demonstrations at Colombian consulates and
embassies around the world.
The U.S has very strong ties
with Colombia. Not only does Colombia sell most of its oil to the U.S.
market but under the auspices of the "War on Drugs" U.S. military aid to
the repressive regime in Colombia continues to grow. This year Colombia
received $289 million in aid making them the third largest recipient of
U.S. military aid in the world after Israel and Egypt. The U.S already
has hundreds of military advisors in Colombia and the Clinton administration
is proposing to give Colombia an additional $1.5 billion dollars.
In August the Colombian government
expanded the U'wa legal reserve. However the expansion includes only a
portion of the U'wa traditional territory and most significantly the new
borders were drawn in such a way as to place the sight of Occidental's
first drill site just outside of the reserve boundaries. The Colombian
government is cynically using this bureaucratic slight-of-hand to maintain
that drilling will not happen on U'wa land.
With drilling imminent and
in the face of mounting violence in the region the urgency of the U’wa’s
struggle has never been so great. The U'wa need all of us to support them
in their struggle. Spread the word. Tell their story. Educate. Organize.
Contact Occidental and the Colombian government . Demand they cancel the
project now!
#3. SAMPLE LETTERS
Dr Ray Irani, President
and CEO Occidental Petroleum Corporation 10889 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles,
CA 90024 or Via fax: (310) 443 6922
Dear Dr. Irani,
I am writing to express
my deep concern with Occidental Petroleum's continued plans to drill for
oil in the ancestral territory of the U'wa people in Colombia. The U'wa
have threatened to commit collective suicide if Occidental moves forward
with drilling. For the sake of the lives and land of the U'wa people and
of the peace process in Colombia, please immediately suspend all operations
in the U'wa ancestral territory. The U'wa people believe that oil is the
blood of mother earth. They have repeatedly and adamantly explained to
your company that they are utterly opposed to your plans to drill for oil
on their sacred territory. It is time that Oxy accept the full extent of
U'wa traditional territory, as defined by the U'wa themselves and withdraw
from all efforts to drill in the Samore block. Oxy's continuing failure
to suspend operations is in blatant violation of the recommendations of
the 1997 OAS/Harvard report. There is ample opportunity to support Colombia
in building energy self-sufficiency. We encourage you to do so by canceling
your plans to exploit the Samore region and investing instead in renewable
energy options. The fate of an entire indigenous civilization is in your
hands. The U'wa deserve to live free from the inevitable violence and ecological
devastation that oil drilling will bring. I urge you to look to your heart
and cancel the project. The world is watching and waiting for you to do
the right thing.
Sincerely, [your name]
LETTER TO PRESIDENT PASTRANA.
Presidente Andres Pastrana Casa Presidencial Bogota, Colombia Dear Honorable
President :
I am deeply troubled to learn
that your government has granted Occidental Petroleum an environmental
license for oil exploration at the Gibraltar 1 drill site which is in the
traditional territory of the U'wa people. As you are aware, the U'wa are
adamantly opposed to any oil activities within their homelands as it poses
a serious threat to their physical and cultural survival . I strongly urge
you to reconsider your government's decision to grant this environmental
license since allowing drilling will cause irreparable harm to the U'wa
people, culture and territory. Granting a license for drilling on the U'wa's
traditional territory - particularly so close to their legally recognized
reserve - constitutes a grave disregard for their deep spiritual and cultural
ties to their land. Oil drilling will also threaten the U'wa by escalating
conflict in the region.
Oil facilities are a magnet
for militarization and attacks by guerrilla factions, which has catastrophic
environmental and social impacts for local communities.
Oxy's Caño Limón
pipeline has been bombed more than 600 times over the last 13 years, with
a new attack occurring on average once a week. You must cancel this project
before it leads to a significant increase in violence against the peaceful
U'wa and other local peoples. As one of the most biologically diverse countries
in the world, Colombia has much to gain from reorienting current development
plans towards strategies which foster ecological conservation rather than
destruction.
By letting the U'wa continue
to live undisturbed, you are making a priceless investment in cultural
and biological diversity for Colombia's future. Now is your opportunity
to take a regional leadership role in developing sustainable, renewable
energy sources, rather than sacrificing ecologically and culturally sensitive
areas to new petroleum exploitation. International civil society is carefully
monitoring the U'wa case. Your resolution of this delicate situation will
either be a critical step towards promoting indigenous rights and environmental
preservation or will be forever seen as enabling one of the worst in a
long line of human and ecological tragedies. Your leadership in this important
case is anxiously awaited. Thank you for your concern and action on behalf
of the U'wa people and their traditional territory. I look forward to your
response.
Sincerely,
###
U’wa Defense Working Group
Members:
Amazon Watch, Action Resource
Center, Earthjustice Legal Defense Fund, EarthWays Foundation, International
Law Project for Human Environmental & Economic Defense, Project Underground,
Rainforest Action Network, Sol Communications