Costa Rica: Popular March, For Dignity in the South

 

Manta en la marcha
Manta en la marcha


 

On Tuesday, October 6th, two years after the Fraud that decided the approval of the Free Trade Agreement with the U.S., a Popular March for Dignity in the Southern Region of Costa Rica was held. More than 150 activists marched from the entrance of the Indigenous Territory of Térraba, towards the center of the county of Buenos Aires. One step after another, they covered 13 kilometers in total. Different communities from all over the South face struggles against the expansion of pineapple plantations, the building of Diquís Hydroelectric Project, an international airport that would be built on the land of “Finca 9”, the plans to develop marinas and industrial tuna farms in Golfo Dulce and in favor of the Indigenous Autonomy Bill.

The southern region is one of the poorest in Costa Rica. Since the 1930´s the United Fruit Company decided to move its banana plantations from the Caribbean coast to the southern costarrican Pacific coastline. Since then monoculture and cattle have dominated the landscape of this part of the country.

 

Chronicle of the March:

 

At 8 am everyone gathered at the entrance of the Indigenous Territory of Térraba to begin the march up the Interamerican Highway, one of the main transit routes and means for commodity circulation of the region. Once the Highway was taken, occupying both lanes, the March began its slow and ardent advance that would arrive at the front of the municipality of Buenos Aires, 13 kilometers from there. At 8:30 a.m. 100 activists embodied the “Popular March for Dignity in the South”. Since the beginning, Police arrived with few cops on motorbikes and in small squad cars. The police´s actions were limited to regulating transit and almost didn’t intervene with the on-going March.

 

Making itty bitty stops along the way, the protesters were on their way to Buenos Aires handing out flyers to the on passing cars and to the locals who live by the Highway. Along the march, more people joined and the group went up to 150 activists. Some of them started walking out of their communities as early as 2 a.m. to take part in the March. Others came the night before after traveling from the capital and other parts of the Central Valley to show solidarity with the groups in struggle in the South.

At 9:10 a.m. the protest reached the bridge over Río Térraba. On the other side there’s no Indigenous Territory anymore. The activists took up only one lane from there on to give chance to buses, ambulances and any individuals transiting down the Highway. They wanted to guarantee their right to protest without generating negative responses from the population.

Amongst those who participated in the Popular March, were kids of a only several months of age carried in their mother’s arms, youth in various forms, shapes and sizes, peasant women heads of their households, students and even a 90 year old indigenous peasant from Térraba. Despite the tremendous heat that tortured and left the participant’s skin marked, the march kept going and reached the town of El Brujo. When the sun had reached its cruelest point, at about 11:30, the protesters decided to hop onto the cars they had and onto the bus that had brought the activists from the Central Valley. That’s how they covered the last 5 Km to the entrance of Buenos Aires. They avoided the heat to finish the march with strength, coming into the center of the county.

 

 

 

At noon, the march arrived at the entrance of Buenos Aires. From there the protesters went to the premises of the Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad (ICE) to show their firmness against Diquís Hidroelectric Project.

As the march went on, by-standers that saw the column of protesters go by with pro-Autonomy flags and chanting against the expansion of pineapple plantations, stayed glaring as passive observers, or in other cases showed some degree of sympathy by taking a flyer through the window of their cars in motion, or even honking as a simple gesture of support.

At 1 p.m. the protest gathered in front of the municipality of Buenos Aires. The local government’s president Juan Bautista Blanco, of Partido Acción Ciudadana (PAC), lives in indigenous territory without being indigenous, and sent a letter to congress a few months ago on behalf of the local government, demanding that the “Bill of Autonomous Development of the Indigenous People” be rejected.

In front of the municipality, an “ICE employee” and self-acclaimed “reporter” tried to record the participants of the march with a video camera. This caused a minor confrontation. A tough guy, stocky and with a shaved head stated ironic and provocative arguments to defend his actions. According to his own perceptions, he was “just doing his job” as he directed the lens of his camera to the faces of protesters. He had to be protected by the police so that the protesters wouldn’t attack him back. After a brief brawl, and a fired up dialogue, the police that surrounded the park (about 12 or more policemen and women) protected Oscar Ruin Cruz, who was identified by some protesters as part of Channel 6 and as a reporter who used to work for “Al Día”, a newspaper of “Grupo Nación” (the major newspaper of groups of power of the country). This agent had credentials that identified him as an ICE employee, specifically for the Diquís Hidroelectical Project. Towards the end of the protest in front of the municipality, several activists unloaded some strong and clear words aimed at the representatives of ICE who were recording the protest.

 

 

 

An indigenous peasant and activist, who had been incarcerated years back for his struggle against the illegal logging of forest in the South, addressed the protesters, remembering the abandonment that the indigenous communities have withstood, in front to the manipulation and neglect of the State.

All along the day there were cars with official ICE logos on their side going by the march. This caused reactions from activists. There was booing, whistling and chants: “Rivers for life, not for death!”. And a huge truck went by thundering and carrying ICE’s heavy machinery. Such situation didn’t happen without showing its paradoxical side. There are contradictions. 10 years ago a wide segment of the costarrican society defended ICE in the streets against the attempts to privatize the company, like in the “Combo del ICE” in 2000. But for the indigenous people in the South, the ICE and their dam have a bitter taste.

 

After the rally in front of the municipality ended, at about 2:00 p.m., the protesters gathered at a big church room to eat and make some reflections about the day. There was also some space to discuss future strategies in their struggles. At 3:30 everyone started going back to their communities.

 

 

No to the expansion of Pineapple monoculture!

 

Today, banana plantations have been replaced by massive pineapple and African palm monoculture. Bio-fuel is produced out of palm oil and these pineapples are exported in great majority to the U.S. and Europe.

This region has had a series of social and environmental conflicts due to the impacts of the pineapple agri-industrial business. Communities located near the plantations have suffered drastic changes in the local economies in addition to severe consequences due to the destruction of natural resources.

The pineapple business extracts huge amounts of water for irrigation from the rivers of the county of Buenos Aires. This water is then lacking further down the river where there are communities that need it. The water left for the local residents is then polluted with agrochemicals. Workers of the pineapple fields are directly exposed to these chemicals that destroy their health. Activists of social movements and organizations that strongly denounce these situations have received death threats.

 

For more info:Frente de afectados por la expansión Piñera

 

African Palm monoculture isn’t as extended as the pineapple plantations, but there are groups in Costa Rica that are trying to give the business a push stating that there’s a need for energetic sovereignty. Like in other parts of the world, the demand of bio-fuels is on a rise as a consequence of the high prices of oil and the foreseeable oil peak.

 

 

Bread today - hunger tomorrow!

 

“Energetic sovereignty” is also a discourse used by the white collar technocrat bosses of Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad. ICE has been trying to dam Rio Térraba since 1964 against the will of the people.

The fact that ICE is a public company, which implies that costarrican civil society owns it, makes the conflict between the firm and the inhabitants of the region more paradoxical. “Boruca Hidroelectric Project” was stopped several years back due to the resistance of the indigenous people that would have been affected by the dam.

The idea of building a dam in the South unfortunately didn’t fade away with the fall of Boruca H.P. Instead, the ICE has modified its plans and is now on its way to try to re-launch Diquis H.P. This project would be less monstrous than its predecessor, but would still be the biggest dam in all of Central America, with a 631 MW capacity. Like in other parts of the world, politicians and technocrats try to “persuade” people by posing the threat of fearfull hypothecal scenarios. This technique is applied in Costa Rica in the case of the dam, but also in other notorious ones. Costa Rica exports electrical energy but the lobbyists of the electrical company threaten with the possibility of shortages and black outs, then declaring Diquis H.P. of “national interest".

The dam would cause severe environmental changes and would flood more than 200 archeological sites and 800 acres of ancient indigenous territory. It would also force 1100 inhabitants to abandon their homes and be “relocated” somewhere else.

 

But the struggle against large scale dams can be won as the case of "La Parota" shows in the State of Guerrero, Mexico. A decentralized system with many small hydroelectric dams, like “El Encanto Hydroelectric Plant”, could produce enough energy to supply to communities without forcing people out of their land or flooding archeological sites.

 

 

Land for those who work it!

 

Land conflict: this is the situation of the community of Finca 9, in Palmar Sur. Government and Capital of the tourist industry want to build an international airport to increase the wonders of tourism and suck the wealth out of nature, its resources and landscapes such as in Bahía Drake and Corcovado National Park. This community of about 40 families has lived off the land producing beans, maize, yucca, plantain, and other products. They live in 240 acres that had been previously exploited by the banana companies, before Corbana vanished 9 years ago without paying the salaries and benefits that they owned their workers by law. The peasants of Finca 9 were then grouped in a government controlled cooperative, INFOCOOP. The community itself is organized though. The Rural Women’s Network and the Group in Defense of the Land of Finca 9 are organic expressions that are fighting together against the representatives and administrators of the cooperative that have links to the local government and use the community’s resources in their favor. According to the testimony of a young peasant woman from Finca 9, those who came to the Popular March did so after being threatened by the pro-airport “co-op leaders”. Part of the community didn’t show up fearing that they would be kicked out of the cooperative thus loosing their land. The struggle in Finca 9 continues currently, and for the next day after the Popular March for Dignity, there were more actions already planned to let their cry be heard and have the community remain on their land.
Finca 9 could have a parallel in San Salvador Atenco, Mexico. (
Video 1, Video 2, Timeline, article) Vicente Fox’s government attempted to expropriate the peasants of this community, indigenous in its majority, to build the greatest meanest shiniest airport ever that would give the government and its president’s image great appeal.

 

 

Indigenous Autonomy - Now!

 

For 15 years now, the members of the indigenous communities of Costa Rica have been fighting for the "Bill of Autonomous Development of the Indigenous People" (file 14.352) ) that, in theory, would protect their rights as an ancient and historically deep community.

Members of the National Commission of Indigenous Matters deny the importance of this bill. Such institution, presided by Genaro Gutierrez, a local “leader” from Térraba who is close to the party in office Partido Liberación Nacional, takes advantage of the current state of the indigenous question, as it manages the resources that the central government allocates, and clears the way to the usurpations and transactions that guarantee his permanence in positions of local power. According to the testimonies of several members of the community of Terraba, where Gutierrez is also president of the Association for Indigenous Development, he has taken charge of hindering the Autonomist Movement’s positions, guaranteeing that those who do not follow government’s policies are excluded of any participation. If you don’t follow governmental policies, then “you’re out”. “You’re out” if you defend Autonomy or denounce corruption, say local indigenous women. In fact, Gutierrez is seen as someone who disowns his denies the cultural heritage of his own people of Térraba.

The Autonomy Bill would also in theory protect their ancient traditional knowledge and would prevent the dispossession of this knowledge by transnationals in the context of the Free Trade Agreement, an issue that has been exposed before National Congress.

 

The threats posed over Golfo Dulce

 

Besides all these huge issues, there’s also the plan to install “Tuna Farms” in Golfo Dulce. Apart from the inexistent environmental studies on the impact that this could bring for the gulf, one can foresee problems similar to those of the salmon farms in Chile. There, fish are treated with antibiotics and pesticides that cause permanent water contamination and may result in strengthened antibiotic resistant bacteria. The fact that fish are reproduced in limited spaces, in which large amounts of fish are overcrowded for an intense industrial exploitation, makes the medical treatment necessary to cure mass illnesses ineffective. Also, it is improbable that the patterns of exploitative use of work force that are seen in Chile aren’t repeated in Costa Rica. There are many doubts regarding fish farms.

 

Like in many parts of the country, private ventures also plan the construction of a marina in Golfo Dulce.

Like in many parts of the country, private ventures also plan the construction of a marina in Golfo Dulce. Last year the project to build a marina in Puerto Viejo fell apart and the "Crocodile Bay Marina" is also haulted. The Supreme Court took in an appeal against the marina presented by the community of Puerto Jimenez. While Government tries to pass a bill that simplifies the proceedings for the installation of marinas, other congressmen and congresswomen question the legality of this law that favors foreigners who own yachts.

The building of the marina actually generates few jobs, but causes great environmental damage. After the construction, the few jobs that are left are taken by foreign personnel and the community doesn’t benefit from the infrastructure. On the contrary, the access to beaches becomes practically private. According to their plans, Crocodile Bay Marina would hold space for more than 250 yachts. These yachts would pollute the surrounding water with the oil and fuel from their engines.

 

 

More info:

 


Note:

The faces of those who took part in the March for Dignity in the South have been distorted to protect their identities: Counter-power is made by all of us and by no-one..

 


colectivo pequeñas hermanas:

 

We are a collective of militant anticapitalists, that are involved in the struggle to subvert the imposed order vindicating art as a political weapon. This is a project of audio-visual counter-information, a loudspeaker for the protagonists of the disobedience of the people.  

 

 

add a comment on this article

sustainable development

no mas muchos horas y piquito dolares 12.Oct.2009 19:25

stop the subsidies for chemical , oil, and gas and any concept of toxic runoff immediately... the china man is destroying a peaceful future plan with bad investments to the degree of wanting more and more,, discipline greed... stop the shareholder dividend on the pharmacuetical budgetary shakedown from copy-right and registrerd trade marks that steal and/or destroy the herbs ,,the people have yet to eat.. note mota ( marijuana is not an herb but hydroponic chemicals should be prohibited along with malt liquor)>

been there seen that

burr 16.Oct.2009 20:34

95% costa ricans don't even know there are indigenous people there. The towns where these plantations are would make the 1900 mississippi delta look sophisticated and well provisioned. The police have been busted numerously this year for running drugs, even stealing confiscated ones. They shake down gringo residents as a sideline. the rivers , exiting through the southern pacific zone in the state of puntarenas are muddy far offshore. ICE is commonly known for being bloated and self serving and getting you hooked up, this year, only with a little palm grease. They have been resisting laws for 2 or 3 years now, by hemming and hawing over regs in the spozedly deregulated cellphone industry. Ask in a store...they smile and say....someday. The Diqui hydro plant has been in the works over a decade. Some mining leach operations have been shut down in this time, but this project, with the promise of money to local thieves, keeps the powerfull motivated. In the meanwhile, they make some progrss stoping ecodevelopement resorts for rich nortenos and ruskis and now even chineese party big fat cats. Resorts inside nature preserves where the law has, for deacades said no developement (ooops) resorts that get first rights to water and thus spell the end of town and farmers in some locals (ooops)resorts that put rooms up on stilts and supply floodlights so the well paying guests can watch turtles no longer able to navigate (those pesky lights) and thus mate (ooops). All of which makes court work for the elites. (in C.R. you can come out of prison for murder , extortion or theft....and go back to your law practice unimpeded) Trials of setting officials (sherifs, judges, ministers...)are always available for slow news days.

And now come the chineese to help them. They brought their own construction crew to do the soccer pitch. Nica labor was not needed.

The majority of vegitables are imported, much from mexico and chile. prices are as high or higher than we pay in the states. nearby Nicaragua is nearly food sufficient and has large organic practice, albeit by necessity (no money) not choice. C.R. sells orchids and supplies Dole and Chaquita. Rice or beans are $1.00 U.S. per pound .

testing teh world

Arnold 04.Nov.2009 08:06

google

commenting on article

nita 04.Nov.2009 08:14

wow this si good to see that google