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1. Cacataibo Case (Peru): Impacts of Hydrocarbon Exploration on Isolated
Indigenous Peoples
CIEL, Instituto del Bien Común (IBC), and FENACOCA- the
Federation of Indigenous Cacataibo Communities (Federación Nativa
de Comunidades Cacataibo) are working together to safeguard the rights
of the Catataibo Indigenous Peoples threatened by oil exploration in the
Peruivan Amazon, particularly the Cacataibo indigenous peoples in isolation.
The Cacataibo Indigenous peoples in isolation live in the areas superimposed
by the Block 107 oil and gas exploration concession in the Cordillera
Azul region in the central Peruvian Amazon. There is overwhelming historical
evidence that shows that forced contact with indigenous peoples in isolation
results in serious illnesses and numerous deaths. Yet, despite the high
risk of forced contact and life-threatening diseases, the Peruvian government
approved oil and gas exploration in the traditional territories of the
indigenous Cacataibo peoples in August 2007. The Canadian company, Petrolífera
Petroleum Del Peru S.A.C., has recently begun laying down lines of explosives
to conduct seismic testing, as part of its exploration for oil and gas
in Block 107. In December 2007, FENACOCA, IBC and CIEL requested precautionary
measures from the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) to
protect the lives, health and physical integrity of Cacataibo indigenous
peoples living in isolation in the Peruvian Amazon. This request highlights
the serious and imminent threats to the lives and physical integrity of
the Cacataibo indigenous peoples in isolation due to the oil and gas exploration
in their traditional territories. We are looking to the IACHR to request
that the government of Peru take precautionary measures to protect the
lives and safety of these indigenous peoples. In particular, the government
from Peru and the company Petrolífera Petroleum Del Peru S.A.C.
should refrain from conducting seismic testing in the traditional territories
of the Cacataibo indigenous peoples.
For more information please visit: CIEL's Cacataibo
Case page.
2. San Mateo Case (Peru): Impacts of Mining on Human Rights
In 2004, the IACHR accepted CIEL's request for precautionary measures
to protect the life and health of the members of the San Mateo community
affected by toxic waste from mining operations, which led to the removal
of the toxic waste that had been dumped in the community. This is a landmark
ruling that recognizes the linkages between environment and human rights.
In summer 2006, CIEL presented its brief on the merits of the case, which
documented the violation of, inter alia, the civil and political rights
to personal integrity, life, and the rights of the child. We also intervened
when mine workers threatened to harm and kill Margarita Pérez Anchiraico,
president of the Comité de Afectados por la Minería en Máyoc
(Committee of People Affected by Mining in Máyoc), who had participated
in a Commission hearing that year. Since the death threats began, CIEL
has denounced the threats and requested that the Commission call on the
Peruvian government to take the necessary measures to protect the life
and safety of Margarita and other human rights defenders. In response,
Peru has provided police protection to Margarita. CIEL and our partners
will continue to do everything we can to support community members of
San Mateo de Huanchor; we also continue to monitor the implementation
of the ruling.
For more information, please visit: CIEL's San
Mateo page.
3. Inuit Case
CIEL has worked with two partner organizations, Earthjustice and the Inuit
Circumpolar Conference (ICC), to prepare a human rights petition on behalf
of the Inuit; we filed the petition with the IACHR in December 2005. The
petition explains in detail why the devastating impacts of global warming
in the Arctic violate the human rights of the Inuit, as defined by the
American Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man. In November 2006,
we were informed by the Commission that it had decided not to proceed
with the petition at present. Even though the IACHR did not proceed with
the petition, it has helped change the tenor of the debate about global
warming by introducing a moral and human rights dimension. Whereas the
debate was previously limited almost exclusively to economic and environmental
impacts, it is now common to hear climate protection and avoidance of
its damaging consequences characterized as a human right. Additionally,
the extensive media attention given to the petition helped to bring pressure
to bear on the U.S. Government, and many legal, academic, and environmental
organizations also took note of the petition.
For more information, please visit CIEL's Inuit
Case page.
4. Hydro-Electric Projects and the Forceful Resettlement of Indigenous
Peoples
On behalf of the Pehuenche families in Chile, CIEL filed a petition in
December 2002 to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights seeking
reparations because their human rights were being violated by the construction
of several dams along the Bio-Bio River. The largest of these dams, the
Ralco dam, would displace 700 Indians, the last group of Mapuche/Pehuenche
Indians who continue their traditional lifestyle on ancestral lands. CIEL's
intervention at the Inter-American Commission forced the Chilean government
to negotiate a precedent-setting settlement. This settlement will be monitored
by the Commission and involves: A promise to attempt to reform Chile's
constitution to secure the protection of indigenous rights; compensation
directly to the displaced families, including land, educational scholarships,
and US$350,000 per extended family; and the creation of a Municipality
whereby the Mapuche/Pehuenche will have local control over its ancestral
territory.
To read an account of the case in context, see CIEL's Issue
Brief on the Ralco Case. The legal documents of the case are
also available below:
Previous advocacy
efforts by CIEL are also available.
For more information, please contact Marcos
Orellana or Lauren Baker.
This page last modified on 20 March 2008.
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