Against the Law of the Jungle : Peru's Amanzonian Uprising

Rénique, Gerardo

JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2009 update KiKe Oré / AiDeSeP by Gerardo rénique B etween august 9 and 20, thousands of Awajun, Wampis, Matsiguenka, Shipibo, and other indigenous peoples of the...

...In fact, the decrees were intended to foster the on­going concessions of thou­sands of acres of public, in­digenous, and peasant lands to private agro-industrialists started during the adminis­tration of Alejandro Toledo and continued under García...
...Prime Minis­ter del Castillo falsely asserted that the continued blockade of power plants and gas and oil facilities—mostly for export—would paralyze industry and throw cities into darkness...
...Oblivious to popular mobilizations and swelling criticism, García dismissed the protesters as opponents to moderniza­tion or boycotters of globalization, or as having been manipulated by “out­ AlejAnDrO BAlAguer / lATinPHOTO.Org JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2009 side interests...
...5 NACLA REPORT ON THE AMERICAS update ment...
...In a unanimous vote the congressional Committee on Andean, Amazonian and Afro-Peruvian Peoples repealed García’s decrees and drafted their own law...
...By this time the ubiq­uitous presence of Alberto Pizango and other members of the AIDESEP National Council in the media and the skillful and astute work displayed by its press team gained public sym­pathies to indigenous demands...
...Indigenous and congressional rep­resentatives reached an agreement according to which the protesters agreed to lift their actions while the representatives would take their draft law to the full Congress...
...The government also increased po­lice and military presence in the most conflictive areas...
...Minister of the Environment NACLA REPORT ON THE AMERICAS update Antonio Barack, commissioned by the executive as its leading negotiator with AIDESEP, declared to the press that the hidden and “ultimate” goal of the protest was the “liberation” of indig­enous territories and “independence” from the Peruvian state...
...The alarmist and ra­cially charged public declarations of cabinet members, on the other hand, failed to ignite the latent contempt and mistrust toward so-called chunchos (“wild ones” in the Quechua language) harbored particularly by urban popu­lations...
...Calling the palm oil industry a “national interest,” the cen­ sight power on legislation involving the use of local resources...
...facilitate the use of public waters by private irrigation projects...
...Together with AIDESEP, the Peasant Confederation of Peru, the National Agrarian Confederation (CNA), and the Confederation of Peasant Commu­nities Affected by Mining established a coalition declaring Peru’s indigenous peoples in “state of emergency...
...JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2009 update KiKe Oré / AiDeSeP by Gerardo rénique B etween august 9 and 20, thousands of Awajun, Wampis, Matsiguenka, Shipibo, and other indigenous peoples of the Ama­zon mounted an unprecedented series of simul­taneous, peaceful demonstrations against the Pe­ruvian state...
...Driven by principles of communal­ity, self-esteem, and respect for nature, the indigenous movement stands as a powerful challenge to the individual­ism, self-interest, and exclusion that are the core values of the neoliberal, monocultural Peruvian state...
...the evaluation of the environmental impact of extractive industries in the Amazon...
...Indigenous peoples have also displaced the one­time powerful left, fragmented by in­fighting, its retreat from revolutionary socialism, and embrace of mainstream electoral politics...
...The product of more than two decades of intense organizing, the AIDESEP’s establishment as an umbrella orga­nization for the several regional and local federations represents a turning point in the political formation and constitution of Peru’s indigenous peoples as an autonomous social and political force...
...update and the reorganization, with the rank of ministry, of the National Institute for the Development of Andean, Amazon, and Afro-Peruvian Peoples, which had been dismantled by García...
...In the ensuing weeks, the congres­sional Commission for Amazonian, Indigenous, and Afro-Peruvian Affairs tabled García’s proposed law...
...Road blockades, marches, and dem­onstrations, particularly intense in southern Peru and the Amazon, the two regions with the largest concentration of indigenous communities, paralyzed most of the country...
...Further north, in the other extreme of the Peruvian Amazon, more than 500 Awajun occupied and closed down the hydroelectric plant of El Muyo, while thousands rallied in the nearby provincial capital of Bagua...
...By mid-February popular organizations, labor unions, citizen groups, ecologists, local businessmen, academ­ics, local municipal authori­ties, opposition congres­sional representatives, and local politicians from the five Amazonian regions gathered in the Amazon The proposed legislation, popularly known as the law of the jungle, sought to undermine the collective­property regime of indigenous communities by conceding Summit...
...He edited “The Uprising in Oaxaca,” a special section in Socialism and Democracy 44, July 2007 (vol...
...The po­lice chief of Amazonas Region, Victor Castañeda, said the mobilizations’ “real stimulus” was to defend the interests of narcotraffickers...
...A week into the protest, with nego­tiations stalled by the uncompromis­ing stance of government representa­tives, AIDESEP raised the stakes with another round of actions...
...ease government control over protected areas...
...regional governments’ over­munally held territories, al­lowing the intervention of third parties as “business partners,” buyers, or mort­gage holders...
...The organization is led by a national council representing six regional coordinating committees spread across Peru’s vast Amazonian territories...
...Its strength resides in its organization from the bottom up, decision-making by consensus, strengthening of traditional knowl­edge, and respect and consideration for traditional apus (elders...
...The protesters, organized under an umbrella group called the Inter-Ethnic Associa­tion for the Development of the Peruvian Ama­zon (AIDESEP), occupied oil and gas pumping stations and hydroelectric plants, staged marches and demonstrations, shut down navigation on rivers, and blocked strategically located bridges and highways along the eastern reaches of Peru’s Amazonian basin...
...A severe blow to garcía’s neoliberal plans, AIDESEP’s victory marked the con­solidation of indigenous peoples as a pivotal actor on the Peruvian political scene...
...The Summit also called the government to an open dialogue and announced an Amazonian strike for March 17–18...
...the creation of a congressional commission to oversee the implementation of the UN Decla­ration of Rights of Indigenous Peoples...
...With his Law of the Jungle held up in Congress, García in mid-May issued presidential decrees 1015 and 1073, resorting to special powers he received from the legislature to facilitate the implementation of the free trade agree­ment with the United States...
...On the banks of the Ucayali River in the surroundings of the port of Pucallpa, indigenous protesters closed the river to navigation...
...Other measures proposed to expand the area of forest concessions (to almost 100,000 acres for use over 40 years...
...The conflict finally reached the halls of Congress...
...It also asked that the president not act as a “Trojan horse” for foreign interests and warned him not to “give away any territories” or to implement any mea­sure concerning the Amazon without the consent of its inhabitants...
...The let­ter and request for dialogue were met with nine months of silence...
...Indigenous peoples have taken over the role of the left as the most important voice in the de­fense of national and public resources and national sovereignty...
...He identified the communal prop­erty regime as Peru’s main obstacle to develop­ment and modernization, claiming the existence of “uncultivated” land that indigenous communi­ties “do not till” and “will not till” because they lack the know-how and financial resources...
...As AIDESEP persisted in demanding a dialogue and protesters maintained their actions, the supposed intellectual authors of the mobilization multiplied rapidly: from subversive priests to rad­ical left-wing activists to foreign NGOs to agents of presidents Hugo Chávez and Evo Morales...
...The decrees thereby eliminated the last legal resource available to indigenous peoples to pro­tect their territorial integrity...
...The proposed legislation sought to undermine the collective­property regime of both highland Andean and lowland Amazonian indigenous communities by conceding supposedly “uncultivated” lands to lumber companies, surrendering the nation’s rights over natural resources to foreign investors...
...The in­digenous struggle has also brought to the surface the Peruvian nation-state’s legacy of colonial oppression and racism...
...The first autonomous regional in­digenous organizations above commu­nity level emerged during the 1970s among the Ashaninka, Amuesha, and Aguaruna peoples in the High Marañon Valley in northeastern Peru...
...Participants unanimously rejected García’s proposed legislation and established the Permanent Forum to Defend the Amazon to coordinate actions and elaborate alternative devel­opment strategies for the region...
...Two days later, Congress passes Law 2440, of­ficially annulling Garcia’s decrees...
...articulation with new and old political traditions...
...The Law of the Jungle triggered a wave of protests across the country and was severely questioned by opposition legislators and constitutional scholars...
...Their primary demand was the withdrawal of Law 840, popularly known as the Law of the Jungle, presented to Congress for approval in late 2006 by President Alan García...
...The group demanded, first and foremost, the immediate repeal of decrees 1015 and 1073 and the can­cellation of other decrees threatening indigenous territorial integrity and au­tonomy...
...García’s approval rating had already plummeted below 25...
...Basic democratic rights were suspended, and public elected civil officials surrendered their authority to the military...
...lower the restrictions for the introduction of transgenic seeds...
...Organized along ethnic lines, these earlier organizations were established to defend indigenous territories and resources against the rapid expansion of settlers, cattlemen, and lumber and oil companies...
...It also embod­ies the dramatic transformation ex­perienced by Peru’s popular move­ment during the near decade since the fall of Fujimori...
...Q uietly and steadfastly in the early hours of August 9, hundreds of Matsiguengas closed down navigation in the Uru­bamba River...
...the creation of a program for protecting indigenous peoples in voluntary isolation...
...Not far away, in a simul­taneous action, another group occu­pied two pumping stations, heliports, and installations of Pluspetrol, the cor­poration operating the Camisea gas deposit—the largest in the country, located in the southern region (state) of Cusco...
...In response, the government declared a “state of emergency” in the four areas at the center of indigenous mobili­zation...
...In that period, indigenous peoples have displaced the labor movement—devastated by the elimination of workers’ rights, neoliberal deindustrialization, and un­employment—as the central force for social transformation...
...22, no...
...These lands to lumber tral government superseded companies...
...He called for the prompt privatization of these lands in order to attract “long-term high technology” investment, holding the communal-property model responsible for “the vicious circle of mis­ery” afflicting the Amazonian region (the Amazo­nian regions of Amazonas and Loreto are among the country’s poorest, according to a 2006 study by Peru’s Cooperation Fund for Social DevelopGerardo Rénique teaches history at City College, New York...
...The group’s forceful, sophisti­cated intervention also shattered the condescending attitudes harbored to­ward Amazonian natives by many Pe­ruvians—including progressive intel­lectuals and left-wing activists...
...The platform also called for the creation of a fund for the estab­lishment of sustainable-development projects among indigenous peoples...
...Requesting an official dialogue with the government, the group of­fered a counter-proposal, suggesting a strategy of sustainable development grounded in the defense of the exist­ing ecosystems, the protection of Ama­zonian biodiversity, and respect for indigenous territories and knowledge...
...It must also shed its connections to elements of the left that remain dis­dainful of indigenous knowledge and political capability...
...This emerging indigenous move­ment’s further transformation into a more coherent anti-systemic bloc— and its demands, strategies, and world perspectives into a programmatic al­ternative to neoliberal capitalism— will not only entail an extraordinary and continuing organizational effort...
...The “uneducated and poor decrees overturned the internal pro­farmers,” he said, ought to be replaced cedures by which both Amazonian with a “middle class” of knowledge-and Andean indigenous communities able and financially sound property safeguarded the integrity of their com­ owners—in his words, the only people capable of “obtaining resources, estab­lishing markets, and creat­ing formal jobs...
...In an astute political move, AIDESEP leaders immediately opened a dialogue with Congress...
...In 1979, AIDESEP emerged out of these experiences...
...Block­ades were now extended to the key bridges and highways connecting the Amazonian region with the rest of the country...
...Startled by AIDESEP’s militancy and the strategic implications of its de­mands, the government went on the offensive, drawing on the racist and anti-Communist repertoires of oligar­chic and Cold War ideologies...
...In an indignant but firm letter to García, AIDESEP dismissed his scheme as one “of growth without develop­ment” devised for the exclusive benefit of transnational capitalists whose in­vestments would further deplete Ama­zonian territories, leaving indigenous peoples “without resources, without air, without water, and without iden­tity...
...His eager and servile embrace of the despised and ailing Washington Consensus contrasted sharply with his electoral promises to revise the free trade agreement with the United States, uphold the autonomy of the regional governments, promote a rural strategy in the Andes based on modernizing peasant production, protect the envi­ronment, and reexamine the tax breaks and fiscal privileges granted to trans­national corporations by authoritarian president Alberto Fujimori and left untouched by his successor, Toledo...
...The Peo­ple’s Ombudsman Office, on the other hand, asked the Constitutional Court to declare the law unconstitutional...
...García justified this onslaught in an October 2007 editorial published in the right-wing daily El Comercio...
...Its membership includes ev­ery one of the 64 different indigenous peoples living in 1,340 communities with a population of about 350,000, organized in turn in 57 valley and re­gional federations...
...In Manseriche, region of Loreto, in­digenous protesters occupied and closed down the pipeline transport­ing oil from the deposits in Manser­iche to the coast...
...Indigenous protesters were not alone in their de­nunciations...
...In a press conference following their first meeting, Antolín Huascar, president of the CNA, announced that peasant and indigenous communities across the country would engage in marches, sit-ins, and regional mobilizations as a prelude to a countrywide indig­enous strike...
...Indigenous forms of collec­tive participation, understanding of leadership as service, and decision by consensus also challenge the top­down organization and “democratic centralism” of the traditional left...
...He was only making matters worse for himself...
...Their amalgamation of democracy and collective interest...
...Prime Minister Ed­uardo del Castillo in turn denounced the uprising as part of a broader “plot” led by the Nationalist Party former presidential candidate Ollanta Hu­mala to overthrow the government...
...Unlike the traditional working class, whose political subjectivity was deter­mined by its subordination to capital, indigenous peoples, and the new poor of the neoliberal age, have a measure of control over the production and re­production of their living conditions, a key factor informing their anti-systemic militancy and disposition...
...and their simultaneous deployment of reform, insurgency, and rebellion are crucial to developing the revolution­ary strategy prophetically envisioned in the 1920s by Peruvian Marxist José Carlos Mariátegui, who imagined a confluence of socialist objectives and indigenous communitarian struggles...
...and establish forest zones of “permanent production...
...Scheduled for July 8–9, the strike was set to coincide with the national strike previously announced by labor and popular organizations, as well as the Amazonian strike decreed by a second Amazonian Summit held in mid-April...
...Vowing to main­tain the blockades and occupations until the government established a direct dialogue, AIDESEP released an 11-point platform...
...The reformist policies of the military government (1968–80), particularly its legislation recognizing indigenous communities and their ter­ritorial claims, created favorable condi­tions for the political mobilization and organization of Amazonian peoples...

Vol. 42 • January 2009 • No. 1


 
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