Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta asoquimbo. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta asoquimbo. Mostrar todas las entradas

lunes, noviembre 02, 2015

Polinizaciones: Cross-Pollinating Experiences in Communications and Culture in Defense of Mother Earth

Original Source: Upside Down World

Polinizaciones started simply in 2007, as an initiative of an autonomous pollinator of the Beehive Collective to distribute Plan Colombia posters to communities engaged in land defense and directly impacted by the USA´s military intervention in the region as part of the “War on Drugs.” Since then, Polinizaciones has evolved and metamorphosed into a grassroots network of cultural workers and communicators that use Beehive Collective graphics, street theater, photo & video, murals, social cartography and other arts-based strategies in the promoting a culture of resistance, struggle and liberation in the defense of Mother Earth and the self-determination of indigenous, afro-descendent, peasant and marginalized urban communities impacted by resource extraction industries.




Origins


On April 16th, 2004, right-wing paramilitaries of the Auto-Defense Forces of Colombia (AUC), under the command of Jorge 40, massacred 13 indigenous Wayuu women and children in the community of Bahia Portete, in La Guajira Peninsula in northern Colombia and displacing over 600 to Venezuela. While at first many believed that the massacre was connected to the Cerrejon coal mine, whose port of export remains near Bahia Portete, last year Colombian President Jose Manuel Santos announced the creation of the latest National Natural Park exactly in the place of the massacre.  The new “National Park of Bahia Portete” confirms that tourism and green economy interests in the region have benefited from the violent displacement of the local Wayuu people.


In November 2006, a survivor of the massacre was on the first of numerous speaking tours in the USA these heinous acts and demanding justice and the right of a safe return for the displaced. One stop of this tour was at the School of the Americas Watch (SOAW) Vigil, held at the entrance of Fort Benning, Georgia. At this vigil the survivor interacted with the Beehive Design Collective invited an autonomous pollinator of Colombian origin, Entre Aguas, to accompany the Yanama (communal-collective work in the Wayuunaiki language) held every April in Bahia Portete since the massacre occurred.  The following year that Bee would move to Colombia and participated in organizing the 3rd and 4th Yanamas, which brought together delegates from across Colombia and the world to accompany the survivors so they could return to mourn their dead in the Clan burial ground, and to verify the continued danger of the situation in La Guajira, which to this day does not allow the displaced to return.


A Socio-ecological niche in need of filling


Apart from assisting the process of the Yanama, Entre Aguas found themselves with a lot of free time while living in the Colombian capitol of Bogotá, and started networking with different local processes. The first story-telling was held at the Centro Cultural Libertario (CCL).  The incorrect assumption that Colombian activists would already know more than a sort-of foreigner about the realities of the US intervention in the region, meant that instead of the traditional story-telling, Entre Aguas just explained the origins, process and history of the Beehive Collective. Quickly it became apparent that actually most people, even those involved in social movements, knew very little about these policies and the Plan Colombia graphic campaign as an educational tool was in great need.


Little by little word of mouth started to spread about free workshops explaining US intervention in Colombia and requests started coming in from all over Bogota.  Different community spaces like the CCL,  CreAcción Espacios, the Vivo Arte Festival and the main campus of the National University became main stays of the buzzings of Entre Aguas as well as new Colombian pollinators, who were so taken aback by the politically-charged graphics that a single Plan Colombia cloth banner was shared and moved all over the place within community spaces, schools, and universities, and many paper poster versions of the graphic were distributed wherever these pollinations took place.




Over time, the limited scope of presenting the graphic and leaving posters became one-sided and the pollinators began to diversify the approach.  The first exercise was in south Bogota, in infamous district of the city, Ciudad Bolivar. Within the neighborhood of Juan Pablo II, the child survivors of the “social cleansing” killings of the AUC of the late 1990s and early 2000s created a youth community space called Semillas Creativas (Creative Seeds), which houses a two classroom preschool, a community kitchen, community library, recording studio for local musicians, silk screen and photo lab.


During a series of workshops, the bees presented both the Plan Colombia and the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) graphics, followed by a drawing session where the children drew the images that they liked the most from the graphics, which were later transferred onto silk screens and printed on clothes. The final day was spent silk-screening all of the children´s and neighbor´s clothes, followed in the evening by a community stew that was shared with everyone, performances from local hip-hop and dance groups and a screening of the animated films, Vampires in Havana I & II.  Just as the pollinators were beginning to grasp the potential for how Beehive graphics and art projects would serve as educational tools for communities in resistance within the city, word started to spread and the requests for sharing started to come in from all over Colombia.


The First Polinizaciones Tours


Around the end of 2007 the pollinators in Colombia began accumulating many pictures of the different spaces they visited, and decided to create a blog to share short briefs and pictures of their experiences in these different spaces.  The blog helped propel this available resource to many more interested communities as well as keep our North American pollinator cousins informed of how far the Beehive graphics were traveling.


In the first couple of months of 2008 the first regional tour was held in the southwest departments of Cauca and Valle del Cauca.  It was the first of many times that the graphics would make rounds through the indigenous Nasa and Misak communities in Cauca, community spaces in the cities of Cali and Popayan as well as the University of Cauca and the University of Valle. In Cauca the Polinizaciones tour connected with the Regional Indigenous Council of Cauca´s (CRIC) Education program and worked alongside the teachers at both campuses of the Center of Bilingual and Intercultural Education and Formation (CEFIC), as well as the education and communication programs of the Misak Nation, to discuss how a graphic based resource could be easily appropriated as part of the schools´ curriculum and be used entirely in indigenous languages such as Nasa Yuwe of Namrik.


Meanwhile the blog started to grow in content as the articles began to deepen and widen the information, not only about the workshops but also give more contexts of the territories and communities, as well as local conflicts occurring. Soon after completing the first tour the requests began to pour in and the planning of different tours started. The need for more cloth banners became apparent.


During this time, two members from the Take Back the Land Movement (TBTL) in Miami, FL, USA expressed interest in going to Colombia and meeting with leaders from Afro-Colombian land defense processes. Linking up with Process of Black Communities (PCN), a small tour visited both the Pacific-coast port city of Buenaventura and the Andean Palenque (Black Liberation community from colonial era origin) of La Toma in the municipality of Suarez in North Cauca. The tour consisted of Plan Colombia graphic storytellings and sharing between the leaders of TBTL and the different host communities.


In Buenaventura it was seen firsthand how the country´s largest wealthiest port is also the home to some of the most impoverished Black communities, also stricken by State and paramilitary violence.  It was also seen how the semi-rural marginal community of La Gloria struggles against losing an 80 Ha forest the community depends on do their subsistence from being razed for a proposed port expansion, as part of the continental development project known as the Regional South American Infrastructure Integration Initiative (IIRSA), serving a neoliberal resource extraction agenda.


In La Toma the pollinators and TBTL leaders experienced a +400 year old community founded on Black Liberation, threatened by the Hydroelectric Salvajina Dam, the GMO pine plantations of the company Cartones de Colombia and the solicitation of company Anglo-Gold Ashanti to create an open pit gold. Bees and TBTL were lowered by rope and pulley deep into a 30 ft deep make shift gold mine where artisanal miners (no use of mercury or cyanide) labored as they have for hundreds of years.


That year there was also a tour in Venezuela, which visited public universities, community and public spaces in communities within Caracas, Choroní and Maracaibo, as well as the first visit the indigenous Wayuu communities along the Socuy River in the Perijá mountains, organized within the Wayuu Organization Maikiralasalii (“Not for Sale” in the Wayuunaiki language). The Socuy River is located over the same massive bed of coal that is under the Guajira Peninsula and Perijá Mountains in both Colombia and Venezuela.  Maikiralasalii has able to unite anarchists, true eco-socialists (not Chavista bureaucrats that self-identify as eco-socialists) and other anti-capitalist environmentalists in a movement that pressured President Hugo Chavez to retract his plans for coal mining expansion and prohibit the creation of new or expansion of existing coal mines.


In 2008 Polinzaciones tours also visited Colombian communities in Bucaramanga, Pamplona, Manizales, Cali, participated in the Medellin Social Forum and repeated an extended SW Colombia tour. The second SW tour returned to the Misak and Nasa communities from the first tour as well as the Afro-descendent communities of La Toma and La Gloria, where in addition to the Beehive story-tellings, social cartography exercises helped youth map their territories, focusing on strengths and weaknesses in land defense processes. This time other Nasa communities in Tierradentro were visited as well as indigenous Kokonuko communities in Cauca and Pasto communities in the department of Nariño.




While on tour in September, over 40 community leaders were killed throughout Colombia, the majority of those being indigenous leaders in Cauca.  On the 12th of October the Indigenous and Popular Minga (communal-collective work in the Quechua language) initiated with the CRIC  blockading of the Pan-American Highway in La Maria, Piendamo, Cauca, that grew to a nationwide Indigenous -led popular uprising that culminated in over 100,000 indigenous people and allies in the main Bolivar Park of Bogota demanding an end to State violence and the right to self-determination of Indigenous Peoples from all over Colombia.


Recognizing our capacity: from touring to local processes


The capacity of pollinators to maintain tours was exhausting and the need to base our efforts in local processes became important to strengthen these local land defense and liberation. While Beehive pollinators in North America have always freely supplied the efforts of Polinizaciones with an endless supply of posters that are mostly given for free to the communities that Polinizaciones collaborates with, the need for large cloth banners was and is always needed to be able to supply communities in resistance with educational materials that support the efforts of territory defense. Through an Atlantic Coast North American tour in 2009, Polinizaciones was able to raise funds to print fourteen large cloth Plan Colombia banners that are currently located and used in different communities such as both campuses of the CEFIC, La Toma, La Gloria, the Pasto community of Potosí, and with Maikiralasalii.


Around the same time the main pollinators in Colombia start to commit themselves to regional processes, putting tours on the back burner to focus on developing local processes. A pair of pollinators that were active in Cauca formed the Colectivo Colibrí (Hummingbird Collective), which in addition to using Beehive graphics, use puppets, street theater and literacy promotion to work with children in indigenous Misak and Nasa communities that are all facing the challenges associated with foreign companies trying to steal land for mining, mono crops and water privatization.   They seek to further develop the understanding of these threats and create spaces were these children can participate and contribute to the defense of their territory.


Another pollinator, Tjesi, who had already been working in the Amazonian region of Putumayo (the territory that gave birth to the Plan Colombia graphic in 2002) using Beehive graphics and film screenings, along with the participation of communities from the indigenous Inga, Kamsá, Cofán, Siona and Nasa Nations, formed the Intercultural Communication School of Putumayo, which continues to develop communication strategies such as maps, photography and audiovisual production, but also traditional communication modes (song, dance, paint, traditional medicines, rituals and ceremonies) to combat the threats these communities face in the region such as oil exploitation, mining, aerial fumigations of glyphosate, and the presence of all armed actors of Colombia´s armed internal conflict.


Towards the end of 2008 then Colombia President Alvaro illegally handed over 9,500 Ha of land in the southwest department of Huila to the multinational company Endesa-Emgesa for the construction of the Quimbo Hydroelectric Project.  One village impacted by the 8,500 Ha reservoir is the community of La Jagua, where some of Entre Aguas' family is from. Since then the focus of Entre Aguas´ pollinations have been in their own region, impacted by the Quimbo Hydroelectric Project and the Emerald Energy oil-company through the local resistance of the Association of Affected Peoples of the Quimbo Hydroelectric Project (ASOQUIMBO). ASOQUIMBO is part of the Ríos Vivos (Living Rivers) Movement- Colombia, the social movements bring together Native, Afro-descendants, peasants, fisher and artisanal miner peoples in Colombia directly impacted by the construction of hydroelectric dams. None-the-less, even with personal priorities in Huila, the pollinations in Wayuu territory were and are still maintained.


In the past few years Polinizaciones has been focused in Huila, Putumayo, La Guajira, Cauca and Nariño.  Since the completion of The True Cost of Coal and Mesoamérica Resiste graphics the tool kit shared with communities has grown. In 2013 Polinizaciones was part of the Ríos Vivos delegation and coordination of the V Gathering of the Latin American Network Against Dams (REDLAR) which was held in Retalteco, Petén, Guatemala, where murals were painted with local Ladino and Mayan youth reflecting on creating collective visual expressions rejecting the construction of hydroelectric dams along the Usumacinta River.


In 2014 the Museum of Antioquia in Medellin invited Polinizaciones to an artist residency as part of the exposition called Contraexpediciones (Counterexpeditions), with peasant and indigenous Embera Chamí 8th and 9th graders of the school of San Bernardo of the Farallones of Citará.  The residency consisted of two weeks of territorial hikes and design workshops resulting in 8 murals within the community as part of the local struggle against gold mining.  Following the residency Polinizaciones was part of the opening panel of the exposition and the journey home to Huila was a Mesoamérica Resiste graphic campaign tour throughout different urban, peasant, and indigenous communities in the departments of Antioquia, Caldas, Valle del Cauca, North & Central Cauca and Huila.


Currently


An observation that Polinizaciones has had within our path and process is that many allies come to communities and work with communities to develop communications products that create awareness about regional conflicts, but rarely support these communities with the knowledge and tools to tell their own stories. An example is how numerous people have visited the region of the Quimbo Hydroelectric Project or Putumayo, created films, photographs or articles about these struggles, but always from their view-point as an outsider. In recent years Polinizaciones has developed its own role as facilitators in these communities so that locals appropriate these tools and are able to tell their own stories.


Since Chavez halted the coal extraction, the accompaniment of Polinizaciones with Maikiralasalii has been dedicated to reforestation and agro-ecology projects, audio-visual production and breeding and protection of local endangered species. Earlier this year Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro announced the expanding of existing and creating new coal mines and also agreements with the Chinese-state owned company Sinohydro to build a thermal coal plant, railways and a port forcing Maikiralasalii to renew their struggle in a now more polarized, unsustainable, consumerist, petroleum-addicted Venezuela.


On the Colombian side of La Guajira, Polinizaciones has just this year started to work closer with the Fuerza de Mujeres Wayuu (the Strength of Wayuu Woman), a social movement bringing together Wayuu woman and men who are organizing to strengthen the role of Wayuu people to exercise their autonomy and self-determination in the their own territory, Wounmainkat.  Through our graphic story-tellings we have helped in consciousness-raising and emphasized the importance of land defense in the territory where Cerrejon continues to attempt to privatize different rivers such as the Rancheria River and the Bruno Arroyo, in order to get to beds of coal under these fluvial streams.




Different Wayuu organizers and communicators have proposed to create a graphic campaign about the history and situation of Wounmainkat, to which we pollinators have responded that Wayuu artists, investigators, educators and organizers must be the ones to create such a tool if it is really to be useful for raising consciousness for Wayuu communities in the Wayuunaiki language. The role of Polinizaciones as outsiders is to accompany and advise the process as well as to facilitate and coordinate the technical aspects of the graphic campaign process, as well as fund-raising to print the maximum amount of posters possible. To facilitate this process we are currently pollinating The True Cost of Coal and Mesoamérica Resiste graphics throughout the entirety of Wounmainkat.


For some years the pollinators of the Colectivo Colibrí have focused their work with the Misak communities near Silvia, Cauca on a variety of issues such as recuperating traditional agricultural techniques, literacy in Spanish, but also working with indigenous educators to develop methodologies and exercises to maintain the Namrik language. While maintaining the work with the Misak, the Colectivo Colibri has relocated to Nariño where they continue to develop the same type of work with indigenous Pasto, Quillacinga and peasant communities.


The Intercultural Communication School of Putumayo has helped local communications collectives like the Cacique Tamaobioy Collective, made up of Inga and Kamsá youth in the Sibundoy Valley. This accompaniment has supported the struggle against mining companies with regional interests like Anglo-American and Anglo Gold Ashanti. An ongoing struggle by the communities in the Sibundoy Valley is against the San Francisco-Mocoa Highway, which would traverse a sacred territory vital for the gathering of medicinal plants.


In 2012 the Intercultural Communications School played a vital role in the Putumayo Minga of Resistance that paralyzed the entire department as 14 Indigenous Nations, Afro-Colombians and peasants united to block the entrances roads connecting Putumayo with the rest of the country demanding greater respect for indigenous autonomy.


In the lower Amazonian Plains, Intercultural Communication School of Putumayo has accompanied the efforts of Nasa communities in forcibly expelling oil companies from their territories, in the process receiving threats and assassination attempts from right-wing paramilitaries. In the outskirts of the city of Puerto Asis, the School is accompanying a displaced Siona community originally from the Putumayo River, displaced due to violence. The killings and displacements happening along the Putumayo River leave no doubt that the IIRSA project to channelize the river so that shipping barges can reach Puerto Asis is simply clearing the region to facilitate this project.


In the Province of Sucumbios in Ecuador, the School is beginning to help specific Cofán communities along the San Miguel River to develop their own educational materials and curriculum who under Ecuadorian law must send their children to schools that are not guaranteeing teachers fluent in the A'ingae language or a curriculum relevant to their world view, resulting in an accelerated assimilation into mainstream, Spanish-speaking Amazonian-mestizo culture.


Finally in Huila in the community of La Jagua, Polinizaciones has helped foster a collective process led by youth and community mothers known as Decolonizing La Jagua. In addition to participating in the regional dam resistance as part of ASOQUIMBO, Polinizaciones has assisted in film screenings with discussions, territorial hikes, mural painting, invisible street theater, a community-led biodiversity photography census (through the online wildlife photography platform, Project Noah), and exchanges with other land defense movements in Colombia.


This process has developed a self-reflective and critical process that examines issues of identity and culture within a population Native to their territory but overwhelmingly Catholic and peasant, not indigenous self-identified. Through these constant efforts, Polinizaciones since 2011 has been an integral part of the communications team of ASOQUIMBO, participating in road blockades, land liberations, and most recently has become part of the national coordination of the Ríos Vivos Movement.


In 2013 Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos announced the agreement between the Colombian State entity CORMAGDALENA and the Chinese state-owned company HydroChina to completely privatize the Magdalena or Yuma River, for the purpose of hydroelectric energy generation (a total of 17 hydroelectric dams) and dredging to permit shipping barges to go upriver.


As a result of this extended threat, Polinizaciones with Decolonizing La Jagua as part of the Ríos Vivos Movement has expanded to begin work with youth in other communities in Huila such as el Pital and Oporapa, where other dams and fracking projects have been announced. In 2014 Decolonizing La Jagua, with support of artivist Carolina Caycedo, led a 5 month arts-education and public action process which offered classes in dance, theater, performance and puppetry in the communities of La Jagua, Oporapa, El Agrado, El Pital and Gigante, culminating in eight direct actions in rural and urban locales; including bridge take-overs, mural paintings, theater performances, and audio-visual productions, all focused on land defense.


Upcoming


This Fall Polinizaciones and the Ríos Vivos Movement will be returning to Turtle Island (North America) with the “Pollinating Rios Vivos” tour to build relations of mutual aid and exchange with other communities in land defense struggles as well as fund-raise for the upcoming processes of land defense. Between October 2015 and January 2016 Polinizaciones will be traveling down the Pacific Coast, later throughout Florida, and tentatively waiting to see the possibility of confirming a short mid-Atlantic tour as well. On this tour there are two main priorities.  The first is to meet, share and create relations of mutual aid and solidarity with Native and other land defense struggles against dams, oil, mining and other extraction interests. The second is to be able to share these experiences in community spaces such a universities, community centers, libraries and other spaces that are also interested in creating relations of solidarity, offering financial support for upcoming projects.


Starting in 2016 we will be continuing the “Pollinating Rios Vivos” tour but now within territories of Ríos Vivos Colombia. For two years we will be visiting all the river basins that are part of the movement; the Upper Yuma & Colombian Massif (Huila), the Upper Cauca (Cauca), the Sinú (Cordoba), the Cauca Canyon (Antioquia) and the Sogamoso and Fonce Rivers (Santander). This two-year territorial journey through dam-impacted communities that have organized and resisted has two purposes as well.


The first purpose of this journey is to help deepen understanding and analysis of local members of the movement through graphic campaign workshops and other education processes, developing community led biodiversity censuses, and supporting these land defenders in the development and use of different artistic direct actions as strategies of land defense. The second component is that this journey through the regional movements that make up the Rios Vivos Movement-Colombia will serve as the preliminary first-hand research for creation of a graphic campaign of the Ríos Vivos Movement.


The creation of this graphic campaign was collectively decided upon during the 3rd Political School of the Ríos Vivos Movement earlier this year. Rios Vivos has decided that the story of our resistance, the destruction of our territories, and our struggle to remain in our regions as the true and only guardians and caretakers of our territories is a story that needs to be told graphically, to strengthen our movement as well as to tell our story to others. This process will be undertaken and led by the Ríos Vivos Movement and allies within Colombia who also are impacted, directly or indirectly, by the destruction of territories through the damming of our rivers.  We are giving ourselves a timeline of five years for the research and subsequent creation of this graphic campaign, which will be collectively reviewed twice a year by the Movement´s political school, in order to horizontally guide its creation as an educational tool by and for our communities in resistance and struggle for the liberation of our rivers and all of Mother Earth.


As if this is not enough, during this time we will not be abandoning the processes we accompany in Putumayo and Wounmainkat - they will be part of this initial two-year journey even though they will not be part of the Ríos Vivos Movement graphic campaign. Within Putumayo we will continue to accompany the educational processes and development of materials and curriculum in the Siona, Cofán and Nasa communities.


In the Wayuu territory (Colombia & Venezuela) will also partake in extended portions of the journey, with the slightly different aspect of assisting and fomenting of a Wayuu-created graphic campaign about Wounmainkat, and the added component of helping accompany processes of recuperation of traditional Wayuu dry lands agriculture. For this last portion we are searching for preferably Native dry land agriculturists who are interested in sharing knowledge and building relations of mutual aid with different Wayuu communities impacted by coal mining in the implementation and recuperation of traditional agriculture.


As in all corners of Mijina, Wounmainkat, Pachamama, Uma Kiwe, Mother Earth, the situation of communities who defend their land and territories is urgent and Polinizaciones and the Ríos Vivos Movement need your help. 

If you are interested here are concrete things you can do to help these communities and territories mentioned above:


-        Invite us to speak and share with your community.


-        Money: unfortunately capitalism has not ended and we need money for direct actions and research journey.


-        Visit with intention: Want to visit these territories? What tools or resources can you offer? Skills building? (some Spanish language proficiency is needed).

- Donate materials: Digital cameras, computers, external disc drives, audio recorders, and carrying cases.
 

- For more information about the Polinizaciones Process please contact: polinizaciones@gmail.com
 

viernes, julio 17, 2015

Struggle Against Quimbo Dam Reaches Critical Point



Photos: Polinizaciones, Carolina Caycedo, ASOQUIMBO & Descolonizando La Jagua.
The threat of the Quimbo Hydroelectric Project at its final hour, the Huilense people stand once again in defense of the Yuma River and their territory
In what has been close to eight years of struggle for a territory, a free and dignified river, the communities affected by the Quimbo Hydroelectric Project in the center of the department of Huila, Colombia has reached its most critical point. The multinational company responsible for the hydroelectric project, Emgesa (Endesa-Enel), has only completed a portion of the environmental, social and infrastructure requirements that they are required to have completed prior to the filling of the dam’s reservoir which started at 5am on June 30th.  Emgesa's director Lucio Rubio told press the dam would be operational by September of this year and will be completely filled in its 8.500 Ha reservoir by early next year.
The communities that have organized and struggled for these years have done so as the Association of Affected Peoples of Quimbo Hydroelectric Project (ASOQUIMBO) and the Movement Ríos Vivos Colombia. Since the beginning when Uribe handing over nearly 10,000 Ha of land to a foreign company as “public utility” in 2008, every single aspect of the environmental license for the Quimbo Hydroelectric project has either been systematically ignored by the ANLA (National Authority of Environmental Licenses), or changed to favor the company´s needs disregarding the people, communities and the ecosystems. One of these cases is of the Ávila Family, the owners and caretakers of the property known as “Las Juntas” in La Jagua, who had their 16 Ha of land used for mixed crops and small scale dairy cattle that has supported the family for over eight decades. “We lost everything, this land is what has supported my family for generations and all we demanded was to relocated or compensated fairly as stated in the environmental license ¨ the same or better condition¨ and now the State expropriates us a forces us to accept less than half of the land´s worth” lamented Jose Ávila one of the brothers who herds cattle on the land.
Mobilization ¡The River of Life!
In March of this year ASOQUIMBO and Ríos Vivos in accompaniment of writer William Ospina organized and traveled the National Mobilization of the Defense of the Magdalena (Yuma) River, the territories, (The River of Life), a territorial journey following the Yuma River through its first bioregions, the Colombian Massif and the Upper Magdalena in the departments of Huila and Tolima, visiting the territories affected by the 17 dams that are intended to be built as part of the Master Advantage Plan of the Magdalena River. The beginning initiated in San Agustin passing through all the places where dams exist or are planned, Pitalito, Timana, La Jagua, Hobo, Neiva, Aipe, going throughout Tolima to Honda and finishing in Dorada (Caldas) with a ceremony in the river.
In the first part of journey following the river there were marches, forums, press conferences where all the aspects and threats related to the Master Advantage Plan of the Magdalena River, which the national government is putting into effect through the entity CORMAGDALENA in conjunction with the Chinese government´s state-owned company Hydrochina. The Master Advantage Plan seeks to turn the upper part of the river into a system of hydroelectric dams (the electricity is for industrial and not social needs) and from the middle to the lower region of the river it will be dredged to allow large container ships to be able to go up from the Caribbean Sea to Honda and connect with railways and highways to the pacific coast port of Buenaventura.
Master Advantage Plan of the Magdalena River
Just as the Quimbo H.P. has been built by consortiums and sub contracts, the group Navelena made up of the Brazilian company Odebrecht and the Colombian Valores and Contratos (Valorcon) will be in charge of the dredging and nagavenatility of the river. According to the magazine Portafolio, the dredging while have to allow for a width, depth, and curvature of a canal that allows container ships with up to 7,200 tons go up from Barranquilla to Barracabermeja; ships with 6,000 tons from Barracabermeja to Puerto Berrio, and ships with 800 tons from Puerto Berrio to Puerto Salgar. With those statistics that responsible entities aim to reach a fluid transport along the 652 kilometers from Barranquilla to Barrancabermeja. The goal is to surpass 1.2 million annual tons in 2014 to 6 million annual tons of our goods for exportation. The terms of the contract with Navelena are for 13.5 years at over 2 billion pesos. According to the National University of Colombia the aims of nagavibility for the river are unattainable do to the natural amount of sediments that the river has as well as the social and environmental impacts since the river.
The Plan also contemplates a cascade of hydroelectric dams starting in the Colombian Massif going all the way down to Honda: Guarapas, 140 MW & Chillurco 180 MW (both in Pitalito), Oporapa 220MW (in Oporapa), Pericongo 80 MW (in Timana), The Quimbo 400 MW (Central Huila), Betania 520 MW (built and functioning in Yaguara), The Manso 140 MW (in Neiva), Veraguas 130 MW (in Aipe), Bateas 140 MW (in Villavieja) and continuing into Tolima with the Basilias 140MW (in Natagaima), Carrasposo 170 MW & Nariño 200MW (in Girardot), Lame 560 MW (in Purificacion),  Ambalema 160 MW (in Ambalema), Cambao 100 MW (in Cambao), Piedras Negras 100 MW and 3 more dams in Honda.
Ecocide in La Jagua and affected animals
In the community of La Jagua, the chainsaws in the hands of the workers of the subcontracted company Refocosta, has progressively deforested nearly all of the area that is projected to be inundated with the Quimbo Hydroelectric Project´s reservoir. Indiscriminately any plant with a trunk over 10 cm is taken down; the screams of the chainsaws have not stopped leaving a devastating landscape everywhere.
The massive deforestation which began in March of this year currently has finished in La Jagua. The first days there was resistance, but soon enough there were hundreds of loggers all over the thousands of hectares of land. What poorly organized forest defense was attempted was overwhelmed. What are left are people taking what wood has not been already taken, but everything is downed, and environmental authorities are harsh applying full force of the law on any one trying to salvage the wood that is rotting in the sun and rain. In La Jagua everything along the Magdalena River from the Juntas of the mouth of the Suaza River into the Magdalena River all the way up to the Peñalta farm. Refocosta has taken down all types of trees, destroying all sorts of dry tropical forest ecosystem from the Paso del Colegio in Gigante to La Virginia in Altamira, epic beings like the ceiba, iguá, cachimbo, raspa yuco, caracoli, dinde, bili bil and cedar lay strewn about on the ground, piled on top of each other flooding the landscape. The largest concentration is in the outskirts of Gigante as the machinery scramble to get as much wood out as they can now that the water is filling. None the less the Autonomous Environmental Corporation of the Upper Magdalena- CAM ordered the dam´s filling to be suspended due to the fact still over 20% of the biomass has not been logged from the reservoir area and what has been chopped down is piled up in the area, the ANLA ignored the CAM´s orders.  Once filled, according to the Investigation Group of Limnology of the National University of Colombia has warned about the possible explosion of cyanobacteria in the reservoir of the Quimbo H.P.
With the exception of the first couple of days in La Jagua, the logging has not had any setbacks. According to the loggers who work for Refocosta the company sells the wood to the multinational company Cartones de Colombia and the big box store chain Home Center. Those who end up buying this wood are buying the massacred and stolen forests of Huila.
Since the logging took place in the areas of La Jagua known as San José, Las Peñas, el Alemán,  Las Cuchas and Peñalta the grape growers and vineyards in llano de virgin have complained about the fruit bats that have migrated and are finishing off their crops. Most growers to deal with the increase in of bats have resulted in applying more pesticides or shooting the bats. The fruit eating and pollinating flying mammals lose their homes and food but also the parrots in the caves of las Peñas have nothing left to eat, the snakes are seen killed and smashed along the high way as the escape the chain saws and the wrath of the falling trees. There are stories of near the wall where the water has already flooded the iguanas, rabbit and quail are perched in the tree tops waiting to be rescued by Emgesa´s boatmen or drown in the rising waters.  Emgesa does not recognize the animals as affected; perhaps it is because the animals do not know how to stand in line outside the office that they have been included on the census of the affected. Emgesa hires veterinarians to relocate animals that they find like snakes, turtles, baby birds, and abandoned pets, though not all have had the best luck, the displaced animals that have had to endure this destruction also included otters, fox, ocelot, armadillo and deer.
A supposed progress
The roads uphill between Garzón and Gigante are already in use, as is the new longest bridge in Colombia, measuring at 1.8 km is has no lighting at all, railing and a side walk on only one side, and the pavement cracked in less than a week after its opening. The Viaduct that connects Garzón with El Agrado floods with tourists on the weekends taking selfies.
On July 6th the last person was displaced from the reservoir’s basin area. In the year 2013 Constitutional Court ordered sentence T-135 obligating Emgesa to realize another census of the affected population in less the 6 months, the company failed to do so. Just one more example of how Emgesa has washed its hand of so many obligations stipulated in the environmental license and the ANLA has facilitated and been complicit in the destruction and ecocide of the territory.
Francisco Cabrera along with wife Angela Trujillo, their children, grandchildren, pets and farm animals are true symbols of resistance, for a long time they were the last family left in Veracruz. What was once a community rich in crops, tree, water, animals, people and life now lays desolate amongst dead and scattered trees, the rubble of demolished homes, and taken over by private, armed security guards and dogs. Until few days ago the Cabrera Trujillo family, along with the church of Vercruz and some 20 trees were the last outcrop of resistance. In the finals days massive amounts of birds of all varieties took refuge in and around his house now that this was all that was left of their habitat. “Don Francisco put a banana on a branch for the birds to eat, “they have always come here and I have always fed them, forever, where will they go now?”.
For eight years Mr. Francisco a fisherman has demanded the company comply with the environmental license to be relocated to a property in the “same or better condition” then where he was on, something the company has not been able to do and is offering money to wash so they do not have to meet this obligation. As the Cabrera Trujillo family loaded their possessions onto the moving trucked Doña Ángela “We use to live so good, there was good work and a lot of fish. It is just to say the fishing here used to be so good, we could live from this… And now there is nothing left, everyone is gone, everyone has been displaced. It really is awful what has happened to us all. ”
Currently Emgesa has relocated people to illegal resettlements that have no permits or environmental licenses. People were relocated into areas that according to the CAM are of unsuitable ground and some are even to close to the oil pipeline of the Emerald Energy petroleum company. Most settlements do not have clinics or schools and some even lack potable water and in the case of the community resettled in La Galda in the Municipality of el Agrado, at one point they were left for two weeks where the water truck did not bring them the most needed and vital liquid.
Since the beginning the affected communities and academic allies knew and were saying that this huge disaster of an ecocide called the Quimbo would happen, from its inception of its irregular approval, it was already know it would turn out bad. In May of this year ASOQUIMBO held a Public Audience in the main campus of the South Colombian University (USCO) in Neiva. At the Audience representatives from the governor’s office, the CAM and the professor, investigator and spokesperson of ASOQUIBMO Miller Dussán along with Cecilia Quimbayo, from the Comptroller´s Office of the Republic criticized harshly backed up with studies and proof of Emgesa´s but also ANLA´s irregularities and unfufilments of the QUIMBO H.P. According to Dussan, “the tectonic faults near the Quimbo´s wall that if something were to move the disaster would be worse than 54 Armeros” (referring to the volcanic eruption and resulting avalanche in 1985 that destroyed the town of Armero, killing more than 20,000 people).
In terms of arguments presented to the audience there is the lack of restitution of 5,300 Ha of agriculturally productive lands that the company and INCODER (Colombian Government Land Entity) has to distribute to the affected population, the individual and collective resettlements without the adjusting  the Basic Plan of Territorial Order -POT-,  the destruction of 842 Ha of dry tropical forest, the ignoring and refusal to acknowledge the relocating and restoration of the San José de Belen Chapel of el Agrado, on June 10th president of the community Junta Luz Neldy Bravo  with other community members  effectively stopped two men working for the subcontractor “Bautista & Bautista” in an attempt to “move” items in the church including the statues, the bell, pictures and tiles that was not authorized by the Dioceses or the governor.
In addition to these arguments on May 11th there was a trembler of with a reading of 3.8 on the Richter scale in Gigante a few kilometers from the wall of the Quimbo H.P. not to mention the dyeing of fish in the Betania Dam down river due to the lack of necessary oxygen because of the reduced water flow for the dam´s filling.
Land isn't to be sold, it is to be defended!
In early June fisher people from Yaguará, Campoalegre and Hobo started a peaceful protest along the national highway between Hobo and Gigante which escalated to them taking over city hall and chaining themselves shutting down the building. The families that depend on small scale fishing for their livelihood protest the dyeing off of fish in Betania that Emgesa denies and refuses to recognize them as affected by the Quimbo H.P. yet the rich business owners with floating cages for fish farming in Betania were recognized and paid by Emgesa.
The filling of the Quimbo Hydroelectric Project has already commenced and you can see the flooding in of reservoir from the highway. Even though the Administrative Tribunal of Huila ratified a suit filed by the fish farmers of Betania, the filling goes on.  The governor like so many others in the Colombian media who were quiet these eight years that Emgesa trampled the communities and ecosystems of central Huila and did nothing but ignore and speak ill of the communities of that mobilized in defense of the territory, now all of the political class is in an uproar about the illegal filling of the Quimbo. None the less the Ministry of Environment ignored the regional denouncements and has upheld the illegal filling of the Quimbo that is already accumulating large amounts of biomass that was supposed to be removed before the filling. 
On July 6th, after nearly two years being violently evicted,  ASOQUIMBO once again liberated lands in the struggle to establish a Peasant Farmer Reserve with the 5,300 Ha that have not been given to the affected communities.  Over 50 peasant families recuperated some 200 Ha in the area called Llano de la Virgen. That same day ASOQUIMBO reached an agreement with the police and Emgesa to organize a meeting with INCODER to settle the land and census issue in a week or more land liberations will occur.
On Friday, July 10th, mobilizations occurred in Neiva in the Santander Park in front of the governor´s office and in Garzon in front of City Hall. In Neiva different theatrical actions took over the city´s central park and in Garzon a chalk-in was had on the street in front of city hall. In Los Angeles, California a group of Colombian women took over the Colombian Consulate with signs forcing the Colombian diaspora to what is going on in areas like Huila. On Saturday, July 11th occurred the last mass at the Chapel in San Jose de Belen bringing together over a thousand people from the region, the Dioceses of Garzon and the different regional Parishes.
The fisher folk and farmers affected by the Quimbo H.P. are on the move and using a variety of tactics to do what they can to protect their territory from the announced disaster. The Colombian government, the multinational and national corporations the plan to continue to impose dams and other projects of displacement and destruction can only expect a growing tide of resistance from the communities that each value and cherish more the true wealth and strength they their territories have given them for so many generations; the rivers, the air, the land, are not to be sold, they are to be defended.