Cacique Guaicaipuro |
MANIFESTO OF THE COMMUNIST PARTIES OF LATIN AMERICA IN DEFENSE OF THE NATIVE PEOPLES AND ANTI-CAPITALIST AND ANTI-IMPERIALIST STRUGGLES.
[Spanish language original text: https://prensapcv.wordpress.com/2022/05/27/manifiesto-de-partidos-comunistas-de-latinoamerica-en-defensa-de-los-pueblos-originarios-y-de-las-luchas-anticapitalistas-y-antiimperialistas/]
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The invasion of the Spanish and Portuguese empires in the lands of Abya Yala, of Pindorama or Tawantinsuyu[1], between the XV and XVI centuries, resulted in the enslavement, expropriation and death of millions of indigenous peoples. As a result of the expansion of commercial capitalism, the colonial project was established through the appropriation of land and water, the plundering of natural resources and the consolidation of a political power based on multiple forms of violence against the native peoples.
The pace and tone of this process are diverse, with particular components in each social formation in Latin America. In Brazil there are often invasions carried out by land grabbers who wish to appropriate part of the indigenous lands and then secure amnesty for their act through a decision of the federal parliament, as has happened on other occasions[3]. There are many examples of land grabbing in the Brazilian Amazon, as recorded in the Uru Eu Wau Wau indigenous reserve, in the state of Rondônia, whose plots are traded on Facebook, and as seen in the Indigenous Land of the Kayabi people, between the states of Mato Grosso and Pará, where it is verified, even, the invasion carried out by Brookfield, a Canadian fund that manages many assets in Our America. The Argentine Chaco is also the scene of these initiatives. The expansion of grain monocultures and cattle ranching has led to the suppression of forests used since time immemorial by the Wichi people. One of the two main actors in this massive land grabbing in northern Argentina is the Cresud group, which controls thousands of hectares in the province of Salta and has the consent of the State.
A similar situation exists in Peru, where the expansion of agro-industrial projects (oil palm cultivation), hydrocarbon exploitation and timber extraction have reduced the territories of indigenous or native peoples, a situation that is aggravated by the expansion of illegal mining and drug trafficking, which in recent years have invaded indigenous reserves, protected areas, national parks and buffer zones, which are not only protected territories for their biodiversity but are also inhabited by uncontacted native or indigenous peoples in voluntary isolation[4]. It should be noted that, in the case of Peru's indigenous peoples, a long battle resulted in Law No. 28736, which has allowed, among other things, the administrative recognition of these peoples with their registration in the National Superintendence of Public Registries, which is a body attached to the Peruvian Ministry of Justice. The administrative recognition of their existence and of their 3 million hectare territory prevents the granting of any type of administrative concessions for the exploitation of natural resources in these territories, but does not prevent illegal activities, whether due to the absence of the State, negligence or State action in favor of landowners and miners. These three features characterize the land and border policy of the Venezuelan State in relation to the territory of the Yukpa, Barí and Yanshitu peoples in the Perijá region, bordering Colombia. The data show a process of accelerated territorial dispossession, persecution and criminalization since the 1960s and the most tenacious threat to indigenous peoples and nature, with mining-extractivist projects on a projected area of 159,000 hectares of open-pit hydrocarbon mines. And in spite of the indigenous mobilizations of the 1990s and 2000s, to stop mining and claim the rights established in the national constitution (1999), every year actors appear summoned by the State to carry out mining investments in the Yukpa, Barí and Yanshitu territories. The last event was the creation of the company Sociedad Anónima Carbones de Turquía y Venezuela with the purpose of restarting the exploitation of two mines in the region of Guasare, to the north of Perijá, adjacent to the territory occupied by Wayuú indigenous people; before that, companies of Russian and Chinese origin did the same. The extractivist threat is matched by the ambiguous titling of lands to the Yukpa people in the last ten years, since, with this act of handing over land titles, the State has made clear the reservation of rights of third parties, namely, miners and cattle ranchers, who are the actors that dispute the territory from the indigenous peoples. In environmental and anthropological terms, the Venezuelan State has projected Perijá as a zone of environmental and ethno-cultural sacrifice, by virtue of the expansion of extractivist investments and the satisfaction of international demand for coal and other raw materials.
In addition to land grabbing, the criminalization and prosecution of indigenous peoples has led to episodes of police and military violence, imprisonment of leaders and eviction of families from their lands. In Paraguay, the recent approval of a law, with the consent of the Paraguayan government and in response to the demands of the country's landowners, opened the way to flagrant repression. The new law modified an article of the penal code and established the possibility of imprisonment for indigenous people who wish to defend or retake their territories. Several members of the MBy'a Guaraní and Ava Guaraní peoples were directly affected by this measure. In Venezuela, the Yukpa people have a tragic record of 13 indigenous people killed by hired killers and military forces. The event occurred in the Yukpa Kuse community, Yaza river basin, Perijá region, where cattle violence, military persecution, criminalization and imprisonment of several Yukpa have been the cause of continuous protests and mobilizations since 2013 in the capital of the province and in Caracas. The impunity of the crimes, above all, the impunity of the cattle ranchers who are the intellectual authors, the aggressions, threats and kidnappings keep several Yukpa communities in a situation of constant risk, while the Public Prosecutor's Office does not give continuity to the trials and denunciations.
Uncontacted indigenous peoples in voluntary isolation comprise transboundary territories in almost all of South America. In the case of Peru, there are 20 documented uncontacted indigenous communities, including the Kakataibos, Isconahuas, Matsigenkas, Mashco-Piros, Mastanahuas, Murunahuas (or Chitonahuas), Nantis and Yoras, located between the Amazonian borders of Peru and Brazil. The problems faced by these peoples lie mainly in the expansive activities of logging and hydrocarbon exploitation, which in many cases must cross their territories. But the dangers do not stop there, but have existed for 400 years with the arrival of the European conquerors missionary activities. These activities carried out in the colonial past by the Catholic Church brought with them not only the detriment of indigenous cultures, paved the way for the exploitation and oppression of their inhabitants (rubber slavery), but also new diseases that decimated thousands of peoples throughout the Americas. Missionary activities have not ceased, since the 60's of the last century, when the Protestant and Evangelical missions penetrated the indigenous settlements of the Amazon, not only initiated a process of cultural, linguistic-educational-confessional uprooting, but also brought new diseases, activities that persist today without any State establishing limits to their expansion projects (linguistic-educational-confessional-political) in territories of indigenous peoples in voluntary isolation and uncontacted peoples.
Given the above, several communist parties in Latin America, with a broad and recognized trajectory of struggles in their respective countries, publish this manifesto. It is a call to accompany the struggle of indigenous peoples in defense of their common goods and their vital conditions of existence. It is a call to grant legal, collective and inalienable title over geographical spaces that they occupy ancestrally and give meaning to national assets associated with cultural and linguistic diversity, autonomy and self-government of the indigenous peoples of the continent. It is a call to oppose, together with them, the advance of capital and the project of bourgeois domination over their territories.
It is based on the premise that the immediate tasks to supplant or defeat the different expedients launched against the indigenous peoples must be combined with the strategy of overcoming the capitalist order and, of course, racism. In the current historical period there is no doubt that the capitalist mode of production is absolutely incapable of ensuring the self-determination of indigenous peoples and respect for their ways of life. The exercise of this right is absolutely impossible under capitalism.
In this sense, the parties that subscribe to the current manifesto intend to build a permanent discussion forum that contemplates the reality experienced by the indigenous peoples of Latin America and, in addition, functions as a qualified space for the coordination of political actions. It is a collective initiative that is open to the collaboration of other political organizations that support this anti-capitalist and anti-imperialist perspective.
Long live the indigenous peoples of Latin America!
Long live the anti-capitalist and anti-imperialist struggle!
Latin America, May 20, 2022.
Brazilian Communist Party
Guatemalan Labor Party
People's Party of Panama
Communist Party of Ecuador
Communist Party of Bolivia
Communist Party of Chile
Communist Party of Venezuela
Peruvian Communist Party
[1] Examples of names given by different indigenous peoples to their place of life before the colonial invasion. That is, before being called the American continent, the lands of the original peoples received different names.
[2] It is necessary to mention that Bolivia stands out in the world trade of mercury, occupying the first positions among the countries importing the metal.
[3] A bill (PL) is in process in the Brazilian parliament, known by the nickname of PL of grabbing, whose content legalizes new invaded areas, especially in the Amazon.
[4] Isconahua, Mashco Piro and Murunahua indigenous reserves (Department of Madre de Dios, Peru).
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