abuse
human rights abuse against environmentalists in southern countries
Police disrupt peasant gathering
in Indonesia
On September 18 th, an international
delegation of 15 Via Campesina leaders from
India, Bangladesh, Korea, the European Union,
the United States, Brazil, Nicaragua, Mexico,
Mozambique, Dominican Republic and Cuba were
preparing for a mission to verify violations
of peasant rights in Lombok, Indonesia. T he
local police tried to disperse some 1000
peasants waiting for the arrival of the
delegation, and then disrupted the meeting,
at one point shooting into the gathering. A
total of 37 peasants were shot and wounded,
some of them critically. Via Campesina has a
number of demands to the Indonesian
government, including police forces being
removed from the area, and the case being
brought before the UN Human Rights
Commission.
Massacre in Tekojoja, Caaguazu
Department, Paraguay
The campaign to halt the introduction of GM
soy monocultures has resulted in suffering,
eviction and killing in Paraguay. On Friday,
June 25, at 5:30 a.m., the attorney Pedro
Torrales and Nelly Verela appeared with 150
policemen with the intention of evicting the
whole community of Tekojoja, one of the
peasant settlements that is being threatened
with the expansion of GM soy monocultures.
There are 2 million hectares of GM soy
monocultures in Paraguay, and the governments
plan the expansion of 2 million more
hectares. In order to expand, peasants will
have to be expulsed from their lands which
were gained during peasant land reform.
As a result of this attack, people were brutally harassed and beaten, and 130 people were arrested, among of whom 40 were children. 54 houses were burnt to the ground, and all crops destroyed. The legal land owner Adelin Osperman, a Brazilian soy producer, joined by hired gunmen, entered the land with trucks, and shot the peasants, killing Angel Cristaldo (20 years old) and Leopoldo Torres (49 years old), and severely injuring 5 more.
Assassination of environmentalist
leader in Ecuador
On June 20, 2005, Andreas Arroyo Segura's
body was found close to the Baba dam project,
with a deep wound in his body. Arroya headed
the bi-provincial committee of farmers'
organizations fighting the dam, which would
affect more than 1,200 families. In the past,
he had received death threats. This project,
declared a national priority by
then-president Lusio Gutierrez of Ecuador,
includes construction of a hydroelectric dam,
and the diversion of the Quevedo and Vinces
rivers to irrigate lands controlled by
agribusiness companies. Opponents of the
project say that the Baba dam will cause
serious impacts on native forest and
wetlands, and on the Tsachila indigenous and
farming communities, affecting as many as
12,000 people. Human rights organizations say
Arroyo's assassination is part of a pattern
of murders of human rights activists in
Ecuador, and have called on the United
Nations to investigate the case.
Nigerian activist Nnimmo Bassey harassed
Tatiana Roa and Nnimmo Bassey ready to sound the alarm for climate justice
Environmental Rights Action and Friends of the Earth Nigeria Executive Director Mr. Nnimmo Bassey, was harassed recently by police in Lagos. Bassey was returning from participating in civil society activities at the G-8 Summit in Gleneagles, Scotland. He was accused of being in possession of inciting documents, and was taken to the police station where he was quizzed for close to two hours. The document in question, according to FOEN sources, was freely in circulation at the G-8 Summit and was an article entitled: "The Truth about the US security Report: The Biafra's Response".
Bassey was arrested on July 7, 2005, at the Old Tollgate Police Station at the Lagos end of the Lagos-Ibadan expressway, and not allowed to make any phone calls. Bassey believes that the police had an ulterior motive for arresting him, likely as a show of force. He is a joint coordinator of a GM campaign. He claims that the police, many of whom have a low literacy level, are acting on behalf of corrupt officials. This situation requires urgent attention to ensure that others are able to speak openly.
Director of Friends of the Earth Guatemala (CEIBA) threatened
Mario Godínez López, Director of Friends of the Earth Guatemala, is receiving serious threats related to his campaigns to protect the rights of indigenous peoples and the environment. Friends of the Earth are concerned for his safety and that of his family and colleagues. He has campaigned tirelessly for human rights and environmental justice in Guatemala and is highly respected by the international NGO community. Mario was recently on tour in London as part of an international speaker's tour, calling for the UK Government to stop using development aid for oil, gas and mining projects. He has been campaigning in opposition to the World Bank financed Glamis Gold Mine Project that has been associated with human rights abuses and environmental degradation.
Indonesian intellectual Dr. Rignolda
Djamaluddin oppressed
Indonesia has become known as a place for
pollution and strange illnesses linked to the
world's largest gold mining company, Newmont.
The company has tried various tactics to
silence criticisms of their now closed
operations that dumped 2000 tons of tailings
waste into Buyat Bay every day from 1996 to
2004. Newmont has poured money into the local
university UNSRAT to pay for research, but
Dr. Rignolda Djamaluddin is one
professor/researcher not on Newmont's
research dole. Rignolda has been one of the
most vocal critics of Newmont and its impact
on Buyat Bay's people and environment. Today,
Rignolda is facing jail time, charged with
defamation by Newmont. It is a charge that
Newmont has used more than once in Indonesia
to silence criticisms of their
operations.

