|
Action Alert
NGO Coalition denounces attempted kidnapping
of Indigenous woman opposed to EDC-supported project
May 9, 2002
The indigenous Mapuche people of Chile need your
help. One of their leaders has been a target for kidnapping due to resistance
to the Export Development Canada (EDC)-supported Ralco dam in Chile.
On April 14, Sara Imilmaqui, sixty-year old Mapuche
leader and member of the Mapu Domuche Newen organization, fought off attempts
to force her into the backseat of an unknown car. This has not been the
first case of harassment against Ms. Imilmaqui. In March, her home was
broken into and her computer was stolen. In 1998, she was followed and
intimidated by an unknown man, later identified as a retired police officer
and thought to be a member of the company's security staff.
The construction of this dam will harm the Pehuenche
people, the last Mapuche tribe to live a traditional, seasonal pastoralist
lifestyle. Without arable land and suitable areas to migrate within, their
culture is at risk. ENDESA, the Spanish electrical company that is building
the dam, is relocating Pehuenche communities by making promises it is not
keeping. Only 6 families remain in the area.
Currently under construction, the 155 m high Ralco
dam is the second of six to be built along Chile's Biobío river.
Upon completion, Ralco will flood 3,400 hectares of land, displace 600
people, and threaten the existence of 50 animal and aquatic species.
Export Development Canada is providing $17 million
for Ralco and has already put US $20.5 million into financing the first
dam, Pangue. Completion of the Pangue dam has already led to illegal forestry
activity on the Pehuenche's land, and according to a report completed for
the World Bank, the Pangue dam failed to comply with the World Bank environmental
standards that were a condition of the project's financing. The World Bank
has not provided support to the Ralco dam.
Although the National Commission on the Environment
and the National Indigenous Corporation originally deemed Ralco illegal,
President Frei dismissed directors in both institutions and ENDESA was
given a permit to build the dam. Despite court injunctions, construction
for the Ralco dam has continued.
There have been reports of increasing violence
in the Alto Biobío. In an effort to stop Alstom Canada from bringing
two transformers to Ralco, the Pehuenche people formed a human chain last
December. Authorities put women and children in jail for days and called
these peaceful protestors terrorists. The recent Events Calendar against
Ms. Imilmaqui clearly demonstrate that her life is in grave danger.
Ms. Imilmaqui will represent the Mapuche people's
struggle at the Permanent Assembly of First Nations People at the United
Nations in New York from May 13-24.
Please write to EDC president and CEO Ian Gillespie
and Minister of International Trade Pierre Pettigrew to denounce this situation.
Ask EDC to withdraw its support of the corrupt Ralco project until the
voice of the Mapuche people is heard.
Mr. Ian Gillespie
President and Chief Executive Officer
Export Development Canada
151 O'Connor
Ottawa, Ontario
K1A 1K3
The Honourable Pierre Pettigrew
Minister of International Trade
Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade
Lester B. Pearson Building
125 Sussex Drive
Ottawa, Ontario
K1A 0G2
Sample Letter
May 9, 2002
Dear Mr. Gillespie:
I am writing you today on behalf of the NGO Working
Group on Export Development Canada to denounce the recent attempted kidnapping
of indigenous community leader Sara Imilmaqui in Chile and demand EDC to
withdraw its support of the Ralco dam project until the voice of the indigenous
Mapuche people is heard.
On April 14, Sara Imilmaqui, 60-year old Mapuche
leader and member of the Mapu Domuche Newen organization in Chile, fought
off attempts to force her into the backseat of an unknown car. This has
not been the first case of harassment against Ms. Imilmaqui. One month
before, her home was broken into and her computer was stolen. In 1998,
she was followed and harassed by an unknown man, later identified as a
Customs Officer.
The construction of this dam will negatively affect
the Pehuenche people, the last Mapuche tribe to live a traditional, seasonal
pastoralist lifestyle. Without arable land and suitable areas to migrate
within, their culture is at risk. This project will flood 3,400 hectares
of land, displace 600 people (400 of them are Pehuenche people), and threaten
the existence of 50 animal and aquatic species.
Despite court injunctions filed by the Pehuenche
and environmental groups, the construction of Ralco is continuing illegally.
President Frei of Chile dismissed the director of the National Commission
on the Environment in order that this agency would overturn its original
ruling that the project was illegal and provide a permit to build the dam.
We are very disturbed to know that Canadians, through EDC support, are
endorsing these blatantly corrupt activities.
We fear that the safety of Ms. Imilmaqui's life
is in danger, and we demand EDC to withdraw its support to the Ralco dam
until the harassment against the Mapuche resistance stops and the project
listens to the voice of the Mapuche people.
Yours sincerely,
Melanie Quevillon
Coordinator
NGO Working Group on the EDC
Dionicio Barrales
Coordinator
Phone: (780) 462-5295
mbarrales@epsb.net
BOLETIN MAPUCHE DE NOTICIAS
COMMITTEE FOR THE SUPPORT OF MAPUCHE PEOPLE
(Edmonton/Canadá)
Servicio de Informaciones
Back to top
|