It has already been four months since the Association of Affected Peoples of the Quimbo Hydroelectric Project (ASOQUIMBO) began liberating the lands which are not destined to be inundated by the impending reservoir, but that are nonetheless properties of the company responsible for the mega-project, Emgesa-Endesa-Enel. These liberations started with farms in the Municipality of Altamira and spread quickly to include other farms in Garzón - such as the Santiago and Palacios farms. There are peasant families affected by the Quimbo Hydroelectric Project who are working and cultivating these lands, growing crops such as corn, plantains, yuca, beans, squash, and herding cattle. “Even though we have had our challenges, we the people affected by the Quimbo Dam have liberated these lands belonging to the transnational company as part of the struggle for the Agro-Nutritional Peasant Reserve that we need for our territory,” explained Mauricio Cabrera, a member of ASOQUIMBO from La Jagua in the Department of Huila.
The
company and the National Authority of Environmental Licenses (ANLA)
have done everything possible not to comply with the environmental
license and have chosen to not respect the decrees released by the
Ombudsman’s Office in favor of the communities impacted by this
mega-project, such as reopening the census of the impacted population.
Regardless, the liberation of land by the impacted population is only an
initial attempt to meet the obligations that the company itself has to
“re-establish and legally and legitimately restore all productive
activities, food security, and the right to a dignified life and work”
for all the area's population. The land liberations are not land invasions;
they are needed actions taken to guarantee a dignified life for the
impacted population and to protect the region’s food sovereignty, a
requisite clearly delineated in the environmental license.
In
June, the Colombian Institute of Anthropology and History (ICANH), that
previously had sanctioned Emgesa-Endesa-Enel for the destruction of
archeological remains, has now decided that the company is the
responsible entity for the creation of a museum in the impacted area of
the Quimbo Dam, subsequently taking control and possession of the
remains of the region’s ancestors. In the meantime, the company
contracted archeologists from the National University in Bogota to
perform an archeological survey of the region impacted by the Quimbo
Dam. ASOQUIMBO rejected this immediately. Members of Jaguos por el Territorio
documented the archeologists during their survey in La Jagua as they
were plundering human bones and ceramics from tombs that they found. In a
meeting with the community, the archeologists and a representative from
the company referred to the remains as “trash” and confirmed the
planned destruction of the sacred petroglyphs in the area of the
trenches and are insultingly proposing the creation of a replica.
On August 14 the Municipal Council of Garzón
organized a debate between the company Emgesa and ASOQUIMBO. After a
presentation from council members, during which the Quimbo Hydroelectric
Project’s environmental license and the company’s obligations were
reviewed point by point, ASOQUIMBO and the company were able to state
their case. What was shown, as has been said for some time now, is that
the company has not met with any of their requirements and that the
Ministry of Environment has not obligated the company to do so.
Accordingly, the council members rejected the Plan of Territorial Order
(POT) and have formally requested that the Ministry of Environment
immediately suspend the hydroelectric project until the company complies
with the environmental license in its entirety.
On
August 19 a national agrarian strike commenced that initially had its
strongest participation in the Departments of Boyacá, Cundinamarca, and
Nariño, which were initially received by the national government to
dialogue. Initially left out, other Departments such as Huila, Caquetá,
Tolima, Putumayo and Cauca over a week ago strengthened the region´s
blockades completely paralyzing all of South Colombia. Residents of
Huila were not only protesting for support and subsidies from the
national government as a result of the free trade agreement with the
U.S., they were also protesting against many other injustices: the lack
of commitment on behalf of the national government’s agreements with
coffee growers during this year's strike; the privatization of seeds,
through Resolution 9.70
of the free trade agreement with the USA, that has had a particularly
devastating impact on the rice growers of Campoalegre; the impacts of
other transnational companies in Huila, such as the oil company Emerald
Energy, operating in the Municipalities of Gigante and Garzón; and the
rage at the company Hydrochina, that has been given the entire Magdalena
River as part of the Master Plan of Appreciation of the Magdalena
River.
On August 20, the fisher-people and their families who subsist from the Betania Reservoir
(Municipalities of Hobo, Campoalegre, and Yaguara) occupied the main
park and City Hall of Hobo with their canoes and cast nets, demanding
their rights. A year ago the city's comptroller’s office found that the
fisher-people were not included as part of the Quimbo Hydroelectric
Project’s impacted population and ordered that they be included in a new
survey as impacted peoples. To date, the company has done nothing to
recognize any of the peoples that depend on the fisheries of Betania.
A fisherman, Julio Cleves Cuellar, explained, “the construction of the Quimbo Dam, with its constant slick of oil, gasoline, grease, and other chemicals that are mixed in with the cement and used to make the dam, in conjunction with the area’s deforestation has polluted the river. The majority of fish have now died.”
A fisherman, Julio Cleves Cuellar, explained, “the construction of the Quimbo Dam, with its constant slick of oil, gasoline, grease, and other chemicals that are mixed in with the cement and used to make the dam, in conjunction with the area’s deforestation has polluted the river. The majority of fish have now died.”
From
September 3-6 about 60 members of ASOQUIMBO effectively blockaded three
entrances of the construction site of the Quimbo Hydroelectric Project
in the area of Paso del Colegio in the Municipalities of Gigante and
Tesalia causing losses for the companies involved. Peasants and
fisher-people allowed free movement of the local population, ambulances,
the police, and military, but blocked all traffic related to the Dam’s
construction site. Blocking the company’s access to the Magdalena River,
local inhabitants were able to paralyze all the sand and rock
extraction activities that have devastated the areas ecosystems and
fisher-peoples encampments.
On
September 5, at around 8 p.m., a humanitarian caravan of about 20
vehicles escorted by the police arrived to the blockade in transit to
the south of the Department with food, natural gas, and other goods
brought from the City of Neiva. ASOQUIMBO members explained to the
caravan that each vehicle would be inspected and all the vehicles that
were taking goods to the communities would be allowed pass but any going
to the Dam’s construction site would be sent back. In the town of
Tesalia a pickup truck, a food truck, and two fuel trucks that had been
sent back days prior infiltrated the caravan.Each vehicle was looked
over by a blockade member and was given pass upon seeing the food or
other goods that were being brought for the region’s inhabitants. All of
this was going smoothly until the vehicles that were destined for the
construction site. When ASOQUIMBO members intended to stop and send back
these vehicles certain members of the police became aggressive with
community members insulting, threatening with arms and pushing people
out of the way escalating what was a peaceful vehicle check at a
roadblock into violence. Police from Neiva started firing tear gas
canisters into the people and two women were physically assaulted by the
police. A member of the Jaguos pro el Territorio collective that was
filming the occurrences received a tear canister to the right thigh from
about 6 meters of distance. As members of ASOQUIMBO defended themselves
from the police attack the caravan was able to push through the tear
gas and the vehicles that were believed to be going to the company in
fact did while the rest continued to the town of Gigante.
During
the incident it was apparent the differences amongst the police agents
of Tesalia and those of Neiva - the agents from Tesalia criticizing how
they handled the situation expressing that they "fucked up bad." Not
long after private security agents of the company made shots in the air
with an automatic weapon. Hours later the police arrived saying they
were "sorry" that the situation was "not handled correctly" and were
asking for permission to allow the return of some of the transit police
from Tesalia that had been accompanying the caravan. Because of the
incident ASOQUIMBO told the police, with backing from a local military
official, that they would only allow an injured police officer to be
brought through in an ambulance, but the rest of the police who were in
the caravan would have to wait till the following morning to decide if
they could. For hours the Transit Police representative that had come
from Neiva after the incident insisted to allow the passing of the other
police and even threatened while smiling that "they had the means to
get them through if you all say no". At 4 AM the police and a tow truck
were allowed to pass after an ambulance came to take care of the injured
members of ASOQUIMBO.
1 comentario:
The capitalist machine is quite organized. Utilizing social scientists to support corporate claims to community lands is priceless!
Publicar un comentario