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Mapuches Threaten to go Underground
May 12, 1999
Sources: El Mercurio, La Tercera
A leader of the Mapuche indigenous movement in
southern Chile says a hard- line response by the government to their protests
over land disputes will make the Mapuche shift their efforts underground.
"This isn't a police problem that is solved
by jailing (Mapuche) leaders," said Alihuen Antileo of the Mapuche Community
Association. He said such measures as the jailing of indigenous leaders
for their role in protests, land occupations and other demonstrations "will
only harden our position. If they close off institutional paths to us,
we will open our own paths to reach our objectives. If it's necessary,
we'll go underground." Protests have increased in recent months by the
indigenous group as they've heightened calls for land held by the government,
logging companies and other private interests. They say they're entitled
to the land because of ancestral land claims.
Antileo criticized in particular the arrest of
Mapuche Community Association leader Pedro Cayuqueo. Cayuqueo went to Switzerland,
where he submitted a report to the United Nations outlining purported violations
of Mapuches' human rights, and was arrested on his return for allegedly
occupying land.
Antileo said a group of Mapuche protesters detained
in Traiguen in southern Region IX stemming from an incident there are political
prisoners. The inmates have started a hunger strike to press for their
release.
The End
Chile Information Project
Monti Aguirre
Latin American Campaigns
International Rivers Network
847 Berkeley Way
Berkeley, CA. 94703 USA
Phone: 510 . 848.11.55 and 707 . 591 .91.49
Fax: 510 . 848.10.08
e-mail: monti @irn.org
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