August 6, 2004: Headlines: COS - Peru: Environment: Reuters: "For Peru, we are just a strange people," said indigenous leader Zaida Saavedra. "But mister President (Alejandro) Toledo, we don't want to disappear."

Peace Corps Online: Directory: Peru: Friend of the Peace Corps: Alejandro Toledo : Special Report: President Alejandro Toledo: August 6, 2004: Headlines: COS - Peru: Environment: Reuters: "For Peru, we are just a strange people," said indigenous leader Zaida Saavedra. "But mister President (Alejandro) Toledo, we don't want to disappear."

By Admin1 (admin) (pool-151-196-239-147.balt.east.verizon.net - 151.196.239.147) on Tuesday, August 17, 2004 - 10:56 am: Edit Post

"For Peru, we are just a strange people," said indigenous leader Zaida Saavedra. "But mister President (Alejandro) Toledo, we don't want to disappear."

For Peru, we are just a strange people, said indigenous leader Zaida Saavedra. But mister President (Alejandro) Toledo, we don't want to disappear.

"For Peru, we are just a strange people," said indigenous leader Zaida Saavedra. "But mister President (Alejandro) Toledo, we don't want to disappear."

Peru Tribes Fear Camisea Gas May Bring Extinction
Fri 6 August, 2004 15:31


By Eduardo Orozco

MALVINAS, Peru (Reuters) - When Peru Camisea natural gas reserves arrive in Lima on Friday the economic boon they promise will come at a high price, the fear of extinction among the remote jungle tribes along the pipeline corridor.

Two decades after they were discovered, the Camisea reserves are expected to bring in about $8 billion in royalties for the government over a 40-year lifetime, generate billions of dollars in gas exports and slash Peru's $700-million a year dependence on hydrocarbon imports.

But jungle tribes along the 430-mile gas pipeline to Peru's coast say their communities are being destroyed by deforestation and river pollution.

U.S. environmental group Amazon Watch says thousands of indigenous people in Peru's southern jungle face malnutrition and hunger because their hunting grounds have been destroyed by the gas pipeline construction.

"Companies don't want to compensate us for the impact of Camisea because they say we don't live near the gas wells. But my people cannot fish or hunt because the animals that fed us have fled," said Ashaninka community leader Alberto Sinangama near the Malvinas plant that pumps gas to Lima.

Thousands of farmers say they are owed $20 million in compensation because of damage to their fields. But Transportadora de Gas del Peru (TGP), the Argentine-led consortium bringing gas to Lima, has said claims of destruction are "unfounded and incorrect" and will not pay compensation.

Ever since Royal Dutch/Shell and Exxon Mobil discovered Camisea in the early 1980s, conservationists have warned developers to tread very carefully in one of the planet's most biodiverse rain forests.

Companies risk wiping out tribes with little or no contact with the outside world because pipeline workers expose them to diseases to which they have no immunity, they said.

According to government reports released by Amazon Watch in March, 22 indigenous people died between May 2002 and May 2003 after exposure to respiratory illnesses from gas workers and 30 percent of the 500-strong Nanti tribe has died since 1995.

Environmentalists say Shell's contact in the 1980s wiped out half of the Yora tribe, pushing it toward extinction.

OPPOSITION TO CAMISEA LOANS

Camisea will also encroach on the Nahua Kugapakori State Reserve, created by the government in 1990 to protect indigenous populations, they say. If Camisea gas is exported to North America as planned, critics say two wells will be drilled deep in the reserve. The government declined to comment.

"If this is the Camisea effect now, what will it be like in 40 years' time when the project is over?" asked Sinangama, his face painted red and wearing a traditional feather crown.

Amazon Watch and other U.S-based groups are lobbying the Inter-American Development Bank to halt the release of a $75 million loan for Camisea that would also pave the way for up to $60 million in a syndicated loan from other financiers.

They say Camisea companies have failed to comply with environmental conditions attached to the IADB loan. The bank was not immediately available for comment.

Meanwhile, indigenous leaders say they will continue to press for compensation and the government has promised close monitoring of the environment. But tribes are pessimistic.

"For Peru, we are just a strange people," said indigenous leader Zaida Saavedra. "But mister President (Alejandro) Toledo, we don't want to disappear."





When this story was prepared, this was the front page of PCOL magazine:

This Month's Issue: August 2004 This Month's Issue: August 2004
Teresa Heinz Kerry celebrates the Peace Corps Volunteer as one of the best faces America has ever projected in a speech to the Democratic Convention. The National Review disagreed and said that Heinz's celebration of the PCV was "truly offensive." What's your opinion and who can come up with the funniest caption for our Current Events Funny?

Exclusive: Director Vasquez speaks out in an op-ed published exclusively on the web by Peace Corps Online saying the Dayton Daily News' portrayal of Peace Corps "doesn't jibe with facts."

In other news, the NPCA makes the case for improving governance and explains the challenges facing the organization, RPCV Bob Shaconis says Peace Corps has been a "sacred cow", RPCV Shaun McNally picks up support for his Aug 10 primary and has a plan to win in Connecticut, and the movie "Open Water" based on the negligent deaths of two RPCVs in Australia opens August 6. Op-ed's by RPCVs: Cops of the World is not a good goal and Peace Corps must emphasize community development.





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Story Source: Reuters

This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; COS - Peru; Environment

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