Monday, August 30, 2010

Untitled

Happy Monday! Autumn is here. The teachers and students are going back to school. Waking up to this Monday, a few snippets of news to sharpen your analysis:

 

1. Twin Peaks, Native Lands and Sovereignty: http://earthfirstnews.wordpress.com/2010/08/29/big-day-for-indigenous-support...

2. Letter to Big Oil: Mobilization for Climate Justice West: http://west.actforclimatejustice.org/2010/08/open-letter-to-big-oil-accept-re...

3. 5th Anniversary of Katrina-Rita events: http://facingtowardsjustice.blogspot.com/2010/08/gulf-coast-fellowship-for-co...

CNN coverage: http://www.cnn.com/2010/US/08/29/katrina.anniversary/index.html

 

1. Save the Peaks!

 

On August 30th, Flagstaff City Council will decide whether or not to sell Flagstaff’s precious drinking water to a single private business for recreation. Visit true snow for details.

As City water prices go up and Flagstaff is threatened to run out of water by 2050, Arizona Snowbowl Ski Business has been offered $11 million tax payer dollars by the USDA to subsidize their plan to make fake snow. This amounts to a corporate bailout for a business located outside of city limits.

The Inter-tribal Tribal Council of Arizona just made a statement affirming opposition to the plan. Save the Peaks Coalition will be holding a rally and prayer vigil at 4:00 PM at Foxglenn park (near Sinagua at 4200 E. Butler Ave) before the council meeting. As Snowbowl threatens to start cutting trees as early as next week, we need your support more than ever.

Here is an article with columns by the Wall Street Journal and the Navajo Times about the issue.

Black Mesa Update

Back in 1974 Public law 93-531 was passed by congress calling for the
relocation of over 10,000 Navajos and 300 Hopi Indians to make way for
Peabody Coal Company to develop the land for open surface mining; to this
day the mine is still in operation sucking up resources and ignoring the
native people. The tribal governments are the lease holders to the
corporation operation on Indian reservations and they will do anything to
sell it out! Traditionally we are supposed to respect the land and live in
Harmony with the Earth, Sky, water and Air. We still try to live that way
here at Big Mountain and yet, it’s a crime.

August 30, 2010 is the deadline date for people that are interested in
Relocation Housing and benefits. You will have to have been head of
household in 1974, full time resident of the HPL. People currently
resisting relocation and people that have signed The 75 Year Lease with
the Hopi tribe are not eligible for Relocation program. The 75 Year Lease
Project is not insuring lease obligations; there is an ongoing movement to
recall the 75 Year Lease Agreement and the few families that didn’t sign
lease or relocation benefits continue to live out here and we are the
people not given any services from The Hopi and Navajo tribal Governments.
Over the summer of 2010 the Hopi Tribal Council developed a resolution to
create a facility that will store carbon in the Cow Springs area of the
western Navajo Nation; there is a movement to oppose this developing
project too.
There is a great need for weatherization assistance, such as wood hauling
for winter months and roof repairs etc. Please contact Black Mesa Indigenous Support for more.

blackmesais@gmail.com

PO Box 23501 Flagstaff, AZ 86002
928-773-8086

Tohono O’odham VOICE Against the Wall

In a statement to the National Guard released Sunday, O’odham activist and global climate justice delegate, Ophelia Rivas, opened a direct line of communication, explaining “When you are out on our land, be mindful that you are visitor on our lands, be respectful, be courteous and do not harm anything.” “We are not compliant people,” she states, “we are people with great dignity and confidence. We are a people of endurance and have a long survival history. We are people that have lived here for thousands of years. We have our own language, we have our own culture and traditions.” Listing several O’odham practices, Ophelia Rivas explains the peaceful traditions of her people, striking a tone of reason with the government. She closes the statement on no uncertain terms: “Remember we do not want you on our lands, we did not invite you to our lands.
Do remember that we have invited allies that will be witnessing your conduct on our lands and how you treat our people.”

 

2. Open Letter to Big Oil: Accept Responsibility for the Damage You Cause!

Open Letter to Big Oil: Accept Responsibility for the Damage You Cause!

To: CEO’s of British Petroleum, Chevron, Shell, ConocoPhillips, ExxonMobil, Tesoro, and Valero

August 30, 2010

In the wake of the recent BP disaster, we are writing to express our concern over the oil industry’s continued disregard for the health of communities and ecosystems around the world. Mobilization for Climate Justice West is a coalition of organizations, some of which represent communities directly impacted by the oil industry’s extraction and refining operations; we are dedicated to promoting effective and just solutions to the climate crisis.

We call on the oil industry to accept responsibility for the damages your operations have caused worldwide and specifically to:

1.     End the use of dispersants in cleaning up oil spills.  Dispersants, such as the Corexit used in the BP disaster, are toxic chemicals whose long-term impact on ocean life is unknown. Using dispersants allows for better public relations for the oil industry since they make the oil less visible, while possibly making the long-term impact of spills even worse.

2.     Grant full access to media and civil society in covering oil spills.  During the BP disaster, there have been many complaints from journalists that BP restricted their access and ability to gain information.  In July, the Society of Professional Journalists issued an open letter expressing their concerns over restrictions of press access to beaches and other sites in the Gulf.

3.     Pay your debt to the communities that have been impacted by your operations.  In the Gulf Coast, the oil spill has destroyed the livelihoods of many fishing and oystering communities. Communities are also impacted by oil extraction and refining in places like Nigeria, where an Exxon Valdez-sized spill has occurred every year since 1960; in Alberta, Canada where First Nations indigenous communities are experiencing abnormally high rates of cancer and a destruction of their traditional ways of life due to extreme water pollution from upstream tar sands operations; and in refining communities like Richmond, California where more than 25,000 people live within 3 miles of the refinery and the community suffers from high levels of asthma and other respiratory diseases.  The oil industry must pay for the the restoration of ecosystems and community livelihoods, for the development of clean energy and public transportation solutions, and for healthcare to treat those whose health has been impacted by your pollution.

4.     Stop funding fake “astro-turf” rallies. Last year the American Petroleum Institute, of which British Petroleum, Chevron, Shell, ConocoPhillips, and ExxonMobil are members, launched a fake grassroots campaign called “Energy Citizen” and bussed employees to lobbyist-organized rallies to oppose climate legislation that might limit climate pollution. Shell, publicly stated last year that it would not participate in “Energy Citizen” rallies. Now API is up to it again with a series of fake rallies to oppose removing billions in oil company tax breaks and opposing limits on offshore drilling. Will you join Shell’s pledge not to participate in what have been called “glorified company picnics”?

5.     Stop lobbying against solutions to climate change and against regulations to protect our communities.  Instead of using its profits to re-pay the debt to communities impacted by its operations, the oil industry funnels billions into lobbying to ensure that it will not be held responsible for its pollution.  During the BP disaster, from April-June, 2010, the American Petroleum Institute spent $2.3 million on lobbying.  According to the Washington Post, three fourths of all oil and gas lobbyists used to work for the federal government; the poor regulatory oversight of deepwater drilling is one result of this revolving door.  The oil industry also lobbies against solutions to climate change; members of the House Energy and Commerce Committee who voted against the Waxman-Markey climate bill in 2009 received almost 3 times more in contributions from carbon-intensive industries than members who voted in favor of the legislation.  In California, Tesoro and Valero are funding Proposition 23 on this November’s ballot to derail the implementation of California’s climate change legislation.

Sincerely,

Mobilization for Climate Justice West, Richmond Progressive Alliance, Communities for a Better Environment, Global Exchange, Greenpeace, Rainforest Action Network, West County Toxics Coalition, Gulf Restoration Network

 

3. 5-year anniversary of Katrina's wrath somber, reflective

By the CNN Wire Staff
August 29, 2010 4:12 p.m. EDT
Doorman and musician Skip Thompson looks onto Bourbon on Sunday, the five-year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina.
Doorman and musician Skip Thompson looks onto Bourbon on Sunday, the five-year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • NEW: Obama speaks at Xavier University in New Orleans
  • Commemorations are planned across the Gulf Coast to mark the Katrina anniversary
  • Officials reflect on lessons learned from the storm

(CNN) -- Five years ago Sunday, the water rushed in, the lights went out and for thousands of Gulf Coast residents nothing was ever the same.

The milestone was marked by vigils, tears and reflection on what was, what came after, what still remains to be done and what, if anything, we have learned from Hurricane Katrina.

A number of events were planned in New Orleans, Louisiana, and elsewhere to commemorate the anniversary of the landfall of Katrina, the costliest and one of the five deadliest storms ever to strike the United States.

President Barack Obama visited New Orleans on Sunday and spoke at Xavier University of Louisiana, where he said that the construction of a fortified levee system to protect the city is under way.

"We should not be playing Russian roulette every hurricane season," he said.

Obama also vowed that reforms are being put into place "so that never again in America is somebody left behind in a disaster because they're living with a disability or because they're elderly or because they're infirm. That will not happen again."

The hard-hit parishes of Plaquemines and St. Bernard were holding commemorative community events, and a third commemoration was planned in New Orleans' Jackson Square.

Katrina left more than 1,800 dead in its wake. It slammed into the Gulf Coast near the Louisiana-Mississippi state line early on August 29, 2005. Most of the dead were in and around New Orleans, where more than three-quarters of the city flooded after its protective levees failed. Nearly 300,000 people were displaced.

After the storm, "We were a city that had no people in it," Ray Nagin, who was mayor of New Orleans when Katrina struck.

"Now, we're a city that has over 80 percent of its population back. Lowest unemployment in the country. Construction everywhere. I think we're on our way to success," Nagin told CNN's Don Lemon as the storm's anniversary approached.

Video: Katrina like 'Armageddon' movie set
Video: Katrina recovery: A story in pictures
Video: Looking at New Orleans post-Katrina
Video: NOLA neighborhood struggles

Still, it is widely agreed that more work remains to bring New Orleans and the Gulf Coast back from Katrina's devastating blow. Some say that little has improved, and entire neighborhoods in Louisiana and beyond have not rebounded.

"Nothing's really changed," said Conrad Wyre III, 35, of New Orleans. Some regions are still "in shambles," he said, and some residents still feel helpless and without support, as if they are "floating in the wind."

About 6,000 families own homes that cannot be rebuilt. One-third of New Orleanians say their lives are still disrupted by the storm, according to a Kaiser Family Foundation Poll. In New Orleans' Lower Ninth Ward neighborhood -- seen as ground zero for Katrina's wrath -- only 4,000 of 18,000 residents have returned.

"I don't have to tell you that there are still too many vacant and overgrown lots," Obama said Sunday. "There are still too many students attending classes in trailers. There are still too many people unable to find work. And there's still too many New Orleans folks who haven't been able to come home."

"So while an incredible amount of progress has been made, on this fifth anniversary, I wanted to come here and tell the people of this city directly: My administration is going to stand with you -- and fight alongside you -- until the job is done, until New Orleans is all the way back."

"This is the place ... where I think the American people witnessed a real loss of faith in their federal government," Housing Secretary Shaun Donovan told CNN's "State of the Union" on Sunday. "I have really been moved by the spirit of the people in New Orleans in the Gulf, and their rebuilding, and the optimism in progress that I have seen. More than 90 percent of the population is back in the New Orleans area, and there is still much ahead of us."

When Obama took office, 40,000 families remained in Federal Emergency Management Agency trailers or were using emergency housing vouchers, "and literally tens of thousands of them were at risk of losing their homes within weeks of us coming in," Donovan said. "Today, 98 percent of the families are in permanent housing."

Katrina made its initial landfall in Florida, where 14 people were killed. But fueled by the warm waters of the Gulf, the storm had grown into a monster Category 5 hurricane, although experts later said its intensity had decreased and it was a strong Category 3 storm when it the coasts of Mississippi and Louisiana.

The storm cut a wide swath of destruction, wiping out whole sections of Mississippi's Gulf Coast and swamping downtown Mobile, Alabama, with a 20-foot storm surge.

Despite the attention focused on New Orleans, it was Waveland, Mississippi that was the hardest hit. Ninety-five percent of the town's homes were destroyed, along with 100 percent of its businesses. Nearly every road was broken up or left under piles of debris.

Waveland began rebuilding almost immediately. Bolstered by $100 million in federal aid, it has repaired utilities, roads, schools, community centers and parks, and has recovered 65 percent of its businesses. About two-thirds of residents have returned.

Ironically, the city of New Orleans initially breathed a sigh of relief in those early hours, as it was spared a direct hit from the hurricane and at first seemed to have weathered the wind and rain. But Katrina's worst havoc was yet to come, as reports of levee breaches began to surface and entire neighborhoods flooded.

Katrina also dealt a black eye to the government, which scrambled to launch a delayed relief effort after the storm as New Orleans residents suffered and reports of crime and looting were widespread. Nagin in a famous expletive-laced interview lashed out, telling federal authorities to "get off your asses."

Then-President George W. Bush traveled to New Orleans, delivering a speech from Jackson Square as he promised, "We will do what it takes. We will stay as long as it takes to help citizens rebuild their communities and their lives."

But that "turned out to be a hollow promise," Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-Louisiana, told NBC's "Meet the Press" on Sunday. "... Because the federal government didn't stay and do everything it could. The federal government didn't make it easy. They made it very, very difficult."

Mayors of New Orleans and other areas, when they requested money to rebuild, were offered loans of $5 million, she said. New Orleans' operating budget, she said, is $460 million, and $5 million "wouldn't buy them a loaf of bread for the week."

Nagin told CNN recently that he has been reflecting on his own response as the storm approached. He acknowledged the mandatory evacuations could have been issued about eight hours sooner than they were.

Asked how FEMA can combat its still-suffering reputation in the region, agency chief Craig Fugate told CNN Saturday he believes responding quickly is the key.

"Speed is going to be critical," said Fugate, who distinguished himself as the head of the Florida Emergency Management Agency before being appointed to the federal post. "We cannot wait for a full assessment. We have to respond as if it's bad, bring the things together, and focus on the most immediate [goal] of keeping it safe, getting to the injured, trapped, and recovering the lost lives, getting supplies in here."

"The big lesson from Katrina is, you can't wait to find out how bad it is," he said. "You've got to respond, as a team, as [if] it is bad."

Obama said Sunday a group led by Housing Secretary Shaun Donovan and Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano is examining disaster recovery nationwide. "We're improving coordination on the ground, modernizing emergency communications and helping families plan for a crisis," Obama said.

"...Together we are helping to make New Orleans a place that stands for what we can do in America -- not just for what we can't do," he said. "And ultimately, that must be the legacy of Katrina: not one of neglect, but of action; not one of indifference, but of empathy; not of abandonment, but of a community working together to meet shared challenges."

The head of FEMA at the time, Michael Brown, resigned two weeks after Katrina made landfall amid criticism of the federal response -- and 10 days after Bush's famous compliment to him, "Brownie, you're doing a heck of a job."

Brown told CNN on Thursday the talking points he and other federal officials used at the time did not tell the whole story, calling it a "fatal mistake."

"They were factually correct, but weren't in context," Brown said. "We're moving all of this stuff in. We have teams here. Rescue teams are doing this. But we never explained to the people that it's not coming as fast as we want it to, and it's not enough, because of the number of people that were left behind in the aftermath of the storm."

"Had I said that at the time, I probably would have gotten the old hook and been pulled off the stage anyway, but the truth would have been out," he said.

He criticized former Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff's handling of the situation. Chertoff attended an avian flu convention in the midst of the disaster.

"Here is why that's so important. In the middle of any crisis," Brown said, "whether it's a natural disaster or man-made disaster, you need to have one person in charge. And that person needs to be on the ground with the team, understanding what's going on."

On Bush's infamous compliment, he said, "I knew the minute he said that, the media and everybody else would see a disconnect between what he was saying and what I was witnessing on the ground. That's the president's style. His attitude and demeanor is always one of being a cheerleader and trying to encourage people to keep moving. It was just the wrong time and the wrong place."

Posted via email from Decolonizing Environmentalism

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Wayús hacen primer proceso de reparación indígena, tras masacre de 12 miembros de su comunidad

This is my friend and estimada compañera luchadora, Debora Barros FInce.

Wayús hacen primer proceso de reparación indígena, tras masacre de 12 miembros de su comunidad


Foto: Martha Lucía Martínez

Débora, líder de la comunidad wayú de Bahía Portete, y los demás miembros de esa ranchería quieren regresar a sus tierras para que sus hijos vuelvan a correr por el desierto. En eso están trabajando para retornar


Así pretenden demostrar que no son secuestradores ni ladrones, como lo afirmó 'Jorge 40' y volver a sus tierras, en la Guajira.

La tarde del viernes 10 de abril de 2004, Débora Barros salió de su trabajo como inspectora de Policía del municipio de Uribia, ubicado en la Guajira colombiana, con el mismo anhelo de todos los fines de semana: ir a su ranchería a compartir con sus primos y tíos. No pudo llegar a su hogar y, cuando lo hizo, el domingo 12, fue para ayudar a identificar los 12 cuerpos que habían sido asesinados por los paramilitares de 'Jorge 40', 'Chema Bala' y 'Pablo'. "Vete que mataron a toda tu familia: no te dejes ver porque te matan a ti también" le dijo un vecino, pero ella sólo atinó a esconderse y a llamar a las autoridades locales.

Ni el alcalde de Uribia ni el gobernador de la Guajira de entonces atendieron el llamado de Débora. "Tu familia lo que se está es muriendo de hambre", dijeron. Según el estudio del observatorio del programa presidencial de derechos humanos y DIH, entre las víctimas se cuentan 4 niñas y 8 mujeres.

A partir de ese día, ella y 320 familias tuvieron que huir. Lo único que queda en Bahía Portete desde entonces son casas destruidas, vacías, y el cementerio.

Algunas víctimas se refugiaron en el olvido, Débora, sin embargo, decidió ir a Bogotá para iniciar un proceso de reparación.

"No estábamos de acuerdo con la ley, porque las penas son irrisorias. Además no contemplan casos de los pueblos indígenas y por eso en un principio decidimos mantenernos alejados de las instituciones" afirma Débora. Sin embargo, la necesidad de verdad y de justicia hizo que su comunidad se hiciera parte del proceso de Justicia y Paz.

El 22 de mayo de 2004 los indígenas redactaron un comunicado en el que denunciaban formalmente la masacre y culpaban a los grupos paramilitares del hecho. La Organización Nacional Indígena de Colombia -Onic- y el gobierno nacional ordenaron una visita en la que comprobaron que no era una hambruna, sino una matanza por parte de grupos organizados al margen de la ley.

A partir del reconocimiento institucional de la masacre y de la voluntad de las organizaciones indígenas por llevar a cabo la investigación, Débora y su familia decidieron vincularse al proceso a través de la Comisión Nacional de Reparación y Reconciliación (CNRR). "Nos llegó la invitación para la inauguración de la sede Valledupar de la CNRR y desde ahí comenzó un acercamiento más fuerte con ellos" afirma.

Los miembros de la comunidad comenzaron a asistir cumplidamente a las versiones libres y audiencias de paramilitares en Barranquilla, y a seguir el tema jurídico sin conseguir fruto alguno. Fueron casi 3 años de espera para que un vestigio de verdad asomara. En noviembre de 2007, Rodrigo Tovar Pupo, 'Jorge 40', reconoció ser el responsable de la masacre de Bahía Portete. "Los matamos porque se había identificado que se dedicaban al secuestro y al robo", afirmó.

Dos meses después, 'Jorge 40' fue extraditado a los Estados Unidos por delitos relacionados con el narcotráfico y, con él, se fue gran parte de la verdad para las víctimas de la masacre de Bahía Portete.

Por una cuestión de honor, los familiares de las víctimas siguieron adelante. "Si nos cerramos les estamos siguiendo el juego a los victimarios, que quieren que no reclamemos nuestros derechos", afirma Débora.

La decisión de continuar ha valido la pena, pues, a los escasos hechos de verdad, se han sumado procesos de justicia, como la condena de 'Chema Bala' a 40 años de cárcel por el delito de homicidio agravado. A través de tutelas, de reclamaciones y del apoyo de las organizaciones para hacer cumplir la reparación a las víctimas, la comunidad de Bahía Portete ha conseguido importantes avances.

"Hemos logrado que la institución haga acompañamiento a los aniversarios que se han realizado en la Alta Guajira, porque no es lo mismo hablar desde la ciudad que acompañarnos en el territorio y conocer la realidad", afirma Débora.

Además, supieron que la masacre había sido planeada en una finca de Carraipía en Maicao, que allí estaban alias 'Lucho', un teniente del Éjército y otros miembros de los paramilitares. En ese lugar fue donde planearon el transporte de hombres y armas al lugar. Por eso, la inclusión de la comunidad al proceso de Justicia y Paz tiene objetivos claros: Quieren saber qué hizo la comunidad de Bahía Portete para que los arijunas -como son conocidos en su lengua madre los occidentales- perpetraran no sólo su territorio sino su dignidad, su identidad y su vida.

Por eso esperan que las autoridades seguirán indagando y obligarán a 'Jorge 40' a declarar y a decir toda la verdad sobre lo sucedido, así él se encuentre recluido en una cárcel de Estados Unidos. Pero más que cualquier acto de verdad, más que condenas ejemplares o actos simbólicos de reparación, los wayú de Bahía Portete quieren regresar a su territorio. Ya han pasado 6 años y no logran acostumbrarse a vivir en una tierra lejana y ajena. "Tenemos tantos anhelos de que se dé ese retorno. Nos imaginamos a nuestros hijos correr por el desierto, estar tranquilos y compartir, dormir todos y estar juntos", dice Débora.

También se está preparando el primer informe del Área de Memoria Histórica de la CNRR sobre el caso de Bahía Portete, que relatará la forma de como mujeres y ancianos fueron torturados, expresará la importancia de la mujer en el contexto wayú, lo que magnifica el daño simbólico de los atentados contra sus vidas, y argumentará por qué este no fue un conflicto interclaneal, sino una masacre fratricida.

La esperanza sigue ahí, y nadie les quita el derecho de soñar. Los compromisos establecidos con la Comisión de Reparación y la labor de líderes como Débora hace que el retorno deje que se convierta cada vez más en una realidad. La comunidad wayú espera que el gobierno brinde las condiciones de seguridad y las garantías de no repetición de los actos para volver, y confían en que este año se pueda adelantar gran parte del proceso de recuperación de la zona, para poder retornar.

"Yo le tengo miedo sólo a una persona, que es alias 'Pablo'. Él tiene mucho conocimiento de lo que estamos haciendo las víctimas y mucho poder en la región, así que nos podría hacer daño, pues sigue prófugo", afirma Débora.

A pesar de las dificultades y alegrías, Débora desearía que el final de este cuento, que parece traído de la ficción, fuera así:

"Érase una vez una comunidad que sufrió una masacre. Al pasar el tiempo y a través de su camino, de la palabra, de luchar y resistir, volvió a estar en su hogar, a soñar. Los niños volvieron a correr por el desierto, a tener la paz y la tranquilidad que siempre habían tenido. Esperamos que nunca más tengan el sueño que tuvieron, sino el sueño de la paz y la tranquilidad".

MARTHA LUCÍA MARTÍNEZ Y MARIO ZAMUDIO PALMA
Periodistas CNRR

http://www.eltiempo.com/domingoadomingo_eltiempo/ARTICULO-WEB-PLANTILLA_NOTA_INTERIOR-7811780.html

 

Posted via email from Decolonizing Environmentalism

Eng. Translation, Social Forum of the Americas rejects market-based mechanisms and REDD

Important developments from the Social Forum of the Americas regarding market based mechanisms.

 * * * * *

Dear all,

Please find below the final declaration of the Social Forum of the
Americas, which took place from 11 to 15 August in Asunción, Paraguay.
There were many events related to climate justice and REDD at the
forum, in which hundreds of representatives from Indigenous Peoples
and social movements from all over the continent participated. The
rejection of market-based mechanisms and REDD was also supported by
Bolivian President Evo Morales and his staff during their statements
at the forum.

Best wishes,

Simone

--------------------
From: Comunicacion Sobrevivencia FoE Py <ecomunica@sobrevivencia.org.py>
Date: august 16, 2010 13:41

Social Movements Assembly Declaration
The IV Americas Social Forum
Asuncion, August 15, 2010
Our America is coming!
Nane Amérika TeeOnemongu' Ehína!

Social movements present at the IV Americas Social Forum, in Asuncion,
Paraguay, we reaffirm our solidarity and commitment to Paraguayan
people to the urgent need for progress in their process to sovereignty
recovery over its territory, goods common, energy resources, land
reform and democratization.

We are in a continent where in recent decades there has been a reunion
between social movements and indigenous movements, which from their
ancestral knowledge and historical memory radically question the
capitalist system. In recent years, there were renewed social
struggles led to the neoliberal governments departure and emerge of
governments that have implemented positive reforms such as economy
vital sectors nationalization and constitutional redefinition.

But right forces on the continent are trying to stop any changes
process. They operate from their political, economic, mass media,
judiciary places which adds a new imperialism offensive - even
military - supporting them. Since last Americas Social Forum held in
Guatemala in 2008 we witnessed the Honduras' coup, the U.S. military
presence increased throughout the Americas. Military bases
installation agreements proliferate, the Fourth Fleet is operating in
our seas. This is a systematic effort to destabilize democracy in the
continent social movements are increasingly suppressed and
criminalized.

We denounce the illegitimacy of the de facto president of Honduras
Porfirio Lobo, at the same time we recognize its people's resistance
and support their struggle for constitutional re-foundation to
establish a true democracy.

We support the Haitian people's struggle they do not need a military
intervention and economic occupation to rebuild. On the contrary, we
demand that the country's sovereignty be respected and other countries
to make a joint cooperation in the fields of health, education,
agriculture and those that are required. We demand the unconditional
cancellation of debt and reject illegitimate debt new process.

Free trade continues in all its variants. This is the central feature
of the European Union strategy, the other neo-colonial power that
operates in Latin America and Caribbean. The International Financial
Institutions are implementing these strategies -World Bank,
International Monetary Fund, regional 'development' banks and private
banking groups- they are creating new and huge debts with direct
impacts to people and nature.

All these threats are linked to an excluding and predatory single
primary export development model that impact on many territories that
expelled populations to uproot and migration. The current systemic
crisis shows capitalist model depletion - and its power centers:
banks, TNCs and G8 governments. Today it attempts to draw the whole
world to a limit and to a visible nuclear war threat by the U.S.

Natural resources protection has become popular organizations and
social movements struggle agenda against devouring capitalism. A
common front is being reinforced against nature destruction and
"market environmentalism" and "green capitalism" are false solutions
such as carbon markets, biofuels, GMOs and geoengineering which are
promoted from principal power centers because of climate change.

We denounce Northern geopolitical countries governments rather than
confront serious climate change impacts they are seeking to evade
responsibility and to develop new carbon market mechanisms to make
more profit, such as "Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and
Degradation "(REDD), which promotes forests commercialization and
privatization and loss of sovereignty over territories. We reject such
arrangements.

We demand these countries to reduce their greenhouse gases emissions
and to create an International Court of Climate Justice. We reaffirm
the Cochabamba Agreement proposals from the World Peoples Conference
on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth, which recognize that
real solutions are climate justice, food sovereignty, land recovery
and agrarian reform, peasant agriculture and integration and
solidarity among peoples against global warming.

Social movements are facing a historical opportunity to develop
initiatives at international level. Our people struggles will allow us
to move towards the ybymarane'y (land without evil) and realize the
tekoporá (good living). We are committed to reinforcing our fight for
our people, food, and energy sovereignty and women sovereignty over
their bodies and their lives, and sexual diversity recognition.

We build alternatives that are based on anti-capitalism,
anti-patriarchalism, anti-colonialism and anti-racist diverse
perspectives, while we go in search of a new paradigm focused on
equality, good living, sovereignty and integration based on solidarity
principle among peoples.

Asuncion, Paraguay, August 15, 2010
Pablo Valenzuela
SOBREVIVENCIA Communication Unit
Amigos de la Tierra Paraguay
Isabel La Cat�lica 1867Asuncion � Paraguay
Tel fax: (595 21) 480 182 - 425 716 Mobile: (595 991) 704 548
email: ecomunica@sobrevivencia.org.py web: www.sobrevivencia.org.py

Posted via email from Decolonizing Environmentalism

Gulf Coast Fellowship for Community Transformation: Katrina and Rita 5th Anniversary Events Schedule

This came across my inbox today and thought I should share.

That, and a friend's fb status post:

"It feels like the day after 9/11 all over again."

Send love healing strength and fight to all our brothers and sisters out there. The ones on the frontlines of climate change and the xenophobia islamophobic backlash.

* * * * *

Gulf Coast Fellowship for Community Transformation

Katrina and Rita 5th Anniversary Events Schedule

The following is a list of community events set to commemorate the 5th Anniversary of Hurricanes Katrina. Our mission is to support the work of community organizers in the region and we hope this document will be of some service to you.

The events take place mostly from August 20 - Sept 4, 2010, with some events throughout the rest of the month of September.

 It is our hope that you attend these community efforts and take the time to reflect and celebrate our accomplishments, our survival and the tasks that remain to be achieved. We also ask that you continue to support these community organizations that remain committed to the longer journey for justice and equity.
 

We stand in solidarity with those who remain dedicated to a just and equitable recovery for all people and we thank the thousands of volunteers, allies, leaders, advocates and activists (from the region and from around the world) who have given their time, energy, sweat, work, prayers and love to help get us to where we are five years after the storms.
 

While this list has been compiled by the Gulf Coast Fellowship for Community Transformation as a service to the Gulf Coast Community at large, we ask that you contact the organizers of these events directly for more information.
 

In solidarity,
 

Colette Pichon Battle, Esq.

Program Director, Gulf Coast Fellowship for Community Transformation

www.gulfcoastfellows.org
 

* * * *

Week of Aug 20 - 27, 2010

Latino-Centered Katrina Anniversary Conference 2010 by Puentes-New Orleans

When: Friday August, 20, 2010- 9-5pm; reception from 5-6pm

Where: Intercontinental Hotel- 444 St. Charles Ave., New Orleans

Contact: Darci Becker; puentesintern@gmail.com
 

Registration information at: www.tinycc/orj1r

Cost: Free admission
 

 

Swimming Upstream

Kickoff Event:
Screening of the promo video for Swimming Upstream

When: Friday, August 20, 2010

Where: JuJu Bag Café; 5363 Franklin Avenue, New Orleans

Contact: Viola T. Johnson; violatjohnson@gmail.com , (504) 813-9008
 

 

Giant Puppet making workshop by Peace is Power/ American Friends Service Committee

When: Saturday, August 21, 2010- 11am-2pm

Where: Leona Tate Foundation on 2411 Treasure St., New Orleans

Contact: Ahmane' Glover -504-565-3596(o), 912-272-9388(c); aglover@afsc.org
 

 

Phenomenal People Celebration of Healing with Hope CDA

This will not only be a time of memorializing and remembering those we lost but a celebration of our many accomplishments. Activities will be throughout Mississippi.

When: August 21-29, 2010

Where: Biloxi, Mississippi

Contact and Schedule: http://www.phenomenalpeople.org
 

 

Trouble the Water (Documentary Screening)

When: August 24, 6pm

Where: Holmes Hall, Tougaloo College, Jackson, MS

Contact: RSVP or for more information, please call the ACLU at 601-354-3408. Or email Nancy Kohsin-Kintigh at nkohsinkintigh@aclu-ms.org

 Cost: (Admission is free and open to the public.)
 

 

Community Center Groundbreaking Honoring Pam Dashiell

When: August 25, 2010- 6:30pm CST - 8:30pm CST

Where: Andry St. at Douglas St. New Orleans

Contact: Global Green Office 504-525-2121

 
SIDE BY SIDE is hosting: Promo Viewing Party for of SWIMMING UPSTREAM

When: Wednesday, August 25, 2010; 6:00 - 8:00 p.m.

Where: Ashé Cultural Center, 1724 Oretha Castle Haley Boulevard, New Orleans, LA.

Contact: Luther Gray at (504) 495-0463 or Viola at (504) 813-9008 or www.ashecac.org

Cost: Free and open to the public, and refreshments will be served.

 
LANO 2010 Annual Conference (Louisiana Association of Non-profits)

When: Wednesday, August 25, 2010 - Friday, August 27, 2010

Where: Astor Crowne Plaza, 739 Canal Street, New Orleans, Louisiana

Contact: http://www.regonline.com/builder/site/Default.aspx?eventid=857532
 

 

Mobile Exhibition: Those Who Fell Through the Cracks – 5 Years After the Storm.

When: Thursday, August 26, 2010 Exhibition opens at 1:00 p.m. Opening reception following: 5:00-8:00 p.m.

VOLUNTEERS NEEDED TO WORK WITH MOBILE KATRINA PHOTO EXHIBIT.
(August 26 - September 3, 2010)- Photographers Stanley Greene and Kadir van Lohuizen will be in town with a Mobile Photography Exhibition, focusing on Katrina, and would like to have individuals who are interested in photography or the media work with them. They will be in New Orleans from August 26 through September 3, 2010, with activities occurring from Central City to the Lower Ninth Ward. Interested?
 

Contact: Call Vy at (504) 813-9008 or Gwen at (504) 569-9070 to sign up; www.ashecac.org.
 

  
Louisiana Justice Institute’s Justice Revius Ortique Civil Rights Awards Banquet
This will recognize the work of national, state, and local civil rights leaders and is a fundraiser for Louisiana Justice Institute

When: August 26th, 2010

Where: Xavier University Student Center, New Orleans, Louisiana
Contact: Jacques E. Morial, jacquesmorial@gmail.com 504.872.9134/(c) 504.628.5517
 

 

August 27 - Sept 4, 2010

 Green Design Workshops & Demonstrations
Series of workshops and demonstrations projects highlighting green design elements.

When: Friday, August 27, 2010- 10am CST- 5pm CST

Where: 5200 Dauphine St., New Orleans.

Contact: Maryann Miller at 504-312-9202
 

 

Restore Trinity: An exhibit of Katrina images featuring the work of Mario Tama of Getty Images and other photographers.

Sponsored by Camp Restore

When: Friday, August 27, 2010- 4:00pm CST - 8:00pm CST -

Where: Trinity Lutheran, 5234 North Claiborne Ave., New Orleans, LA 

Contact: Kurt Jostes, 504.242.2636 ext. 5015, 504.289.4497 (c)

 
Mobile Exhibition: Those Who Fell Through the Cracks – 5 Years After the Storm.

Film Screening: Trouble the Water, 8:00 p.m. and performance by Kimberly Rivers Roberts aka Black Kold Medina

When: Friday, August 27, 2010, Symposium: 6:00-8:00 p.m.

 
Fifth Anniversary Reflections Panel: Cultural community reflections of Katrina

When: August27,2010,6pm

Where: Ashe Cultural Arts Center, New Orleans

Contact: Ashe Cultural Center Damia Khanboubi - dkhan504@gmail.com - 504.569.9070

Please bring art supplies.
 

 

Not Meant to Live Like This: Commemoration Event by Fourth World Movement
Katrina commemoration event to highlight the voices of Louisiana residents who live in extreme poverty and the stories of how their lives continue to be directly impacted five years after Hurricane Katrina.

When: Saturday, August 28, 2010 -1pm-6pm
Where: Ashe Cultural Center located at 1712 Oretha Castle Haley Blvd., New Orleans

Contact: Maria Victoire- maria.victoire@atd-quartmonde.org, phone 504.899.9950 Dierdre Mauss - robertmauss@att.net - 504.948.0495
 

 

Fifty for Five: Commemoration Event by Rebuilding Together
Rebuilding Together New Orleans along with allies, sponsors and volunteers, repair 50 homes in 5 days in Gentilly- New Orleans.

When: Saturday, August 28, 2010: 2:00 PM– 8:00 PM

Where: Lafayette Square -New Orleans, LA
(between St. Charles and Camp, N. Maestri & S. Maestri.)

Contact: Jeanne Bourgeois jbourgeois@rtno.org ; 504.875.0520

Cost: Donations accepted; cash needed to purchase food, drinks.
 

 

Community and Resistance: Five Years After Katrina - Featuring poet Sunni Patterson
Reflections, dialogue and discussion on the lessons for the social justice community from the past five years

When: Saturday, August 28, 3:00pm

Where: Community Book Center, 2523 Bayou Rd, New Orleans, LA 

Contact: Jordan Flaherty, neworleans@leftturn.org or Community Book Center, 504.948.READ
 

 

Lower 9th Ward Village Katrina Anniversary Celebration and Fundraiser –
An evening of music, fun and food with some of New Orleans most talented Musicians!

When: Saturday, August 28, 2010 -7:00pm- 10:00pm

Where: Lower 9th Ward Community Center, 1001 Charbonnet Street, New Orleans.

Contact: Mack (504) 402-4284 or www.lower9thwardvillage.org. 

Cost: Free Admission! Donations appreciated!

 

New Orleans' First Annual Latin Jazz Festival Presented by Casa Borrega
Commemorating the work of our Latino immigrants in rebuilding the region and to benefit Global Green.

When: August 28, 2010- 9:30pm to 2am

Where: Zeitgeist Arts Center, 1618 Oretha Castle Haley Blvd., New Orleans, LA

Contact: Linda Stone- lstone@globalgreen.org, 504-525-2121 ext.186 or 504-292-3705 Cost: $10 donation for admission to this event featuring

 

The Resilience of a People 2010 Community Fest
Cost: Games and food available for purchase.

 

Day of Service to Commemorate the 5th Anniversary sponsored by Operation REACH, Inc.

Day of service dedicated to honor our community and celebrate the spirit of New Orleans. Projects designed to engage, empower and inspire all ages.

When: Saturday, August 28th; 9:30 - 3 p.m. (REGISTRATION 9:30-10am)

Where: Operation REACH, Inc. 2115 Carondelet Street, New Orleans, LA 70130

Contact: Contact ssanders@operationreach.org or 504-529-1922 x.106

Dress comfortably in clothes that you don't mind getting dirty.

 

President Barack Obama to Mark Katrina Anniversary in New Orleans:

President Barack Obama will mark the fifth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans on Aug.29. The White House says Obama will speak at Xavier University. Other administration officials who have worked on Katrina recovery efforts will also be in the region to mark the anniversary.


“Coming Home” Katrina Interfaith Sunrise Service
Interfaith Memorial Service on the Fifth Anniversary of Katrina sponsored by MS Coast Interfaith Disaster Task Force and the Steps Coalition. Representatives from the varied faith traditions on the MS Gulf Coast will participate in the Service.

When: Sunday, August 29, 2010- 6:30 AM

Where: Trinity Episcopal Church, 125 Church Avenue- Pass Christian, MS 39571

 

Strength, Resilience: 5th Annual Hurricane Katrina Memorial Celebration.

Katrina Memorial Commission invites public to attend. Begins at the Lower 9th Ward Katrina Monument. The Honorable Maxine Waters to serve as keynote speaker.

When: Sunday, August 29- 8:30am - 11:30am CST

Where: Tennessee St. @ N. Claiborne, New Orleans, LA Contact: Donna Dugue’ Office of Councilman Jon D. Johnson 504-658-1050 dmdugue@cityofno.com

 

Celebration of 5th survival of the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina and bring communities,
churches and city officials together.

When: August 28, 2010

Where: Jack & Florence Goldin Sports Complex, Prudie Circle Gulfport, MS.

Contact: Bishop Anthony Thompson- 228-326-3185 or Lori Thompson – 228-223-2568

 

The Fifth Annual Katrina March and Secondline sponsored by the New Orleans Katrina Commemoration Foundation.

Community members organize this march annually to support the community's hard work for housing justice, education justice, healthcare justice, law enforcement justice, and environmental justice. A healing ceremony at Jourdan Road and North Galvez at the location where the levee’s breached in the lower 9th Ward.

When: Sunday, August 29, 2010 - 10am/ Secondline at 1pm

Where: Secondline at the corner of Jordan & N. Galvez, New Orleans, LA (1840 North Claiborne Avenue).

Rally at the corner of St. Bernard and Claiborne Ave.

Contact: 504.496.2668 office; katrinacommemoration@email.com

 

Survivors Village March and Rally

When: Sunday August 29, 2010- 10am

Where: March/Rally begins at Fight Back Center- 3800 block of St. Bernard Ave march proceeding through the mixed income area & down St. Bernard Ave to Hunters Field to join the City-wide rally.

Contact: Endesha; ejkssno@yahoo.com ; 504-239-2907

 

Remembering Katrina: 5 Years Later sponsored by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Charter School.

Join the staff and students as we celebrate life, fortitude and the future. Music, Jazz band, Interpretive dance and Food.

When: Sunday, Aug. 29- 10:00am

Where: Corner of Caffin Ave. & Claiborne Ave.

Contact: Sylvia Ellison, Project Director 504.940.2243

 

Second Line to the Superdome

Mayor Mitch Landrieu and all of New Orleans will second line into the Superdome for musical performances. It will be the biggest parade in history!

When: Sunday, August 29, 2010

Cost: Free

Second Line on Tennessee Ave. -

1:00pm CST - Contact Robert Green 504-201-1207

 

2nd Annual Asian Americans for Change Gulf Coast Benefit

When: Sunday, August 29, 2010 at 6:30pm

Where: The Biloxi Community Center; 591 Howard Ave., Biloxi, MS

Contact: Kaitlin Truong, kaitlin.troung@aachange.org; 228.806.1384

Cost: $50 food and entertainment or $25 entertainment only.

 

Group Photographic Projection on the Levee Wall -

Images of Katrina by Stanley Greene,Andy Levin, Kadir Lohuizen, Alan Chin, Debby Fleming Caffery, Jake Price, Anthony Suau, Lee Celano, Jennifer Zdon and friends

When: Sunday August 29- 9:00pm

Where: N. Roman and Deslonde Street at the Industrial Canal Levee, light refreshments/burgers

Contact: Andy Levin 504 701-0961

 

Workshop/Seminar with Stanley Green, Kadir van Lohuizen & Alan Chin
Exploit visual images, via a traveling mobile exhibition of large-scale mural photographs produced to document of Hurricane Katrina’s effects on Gulf Coast residents and the struggles they face to this day in re-establishing their lives.

When: Monday, August 30, 2010 – 5:00-8:00 p.m.
Where: Ashé Cultural Center; 1712 Oretha Castle Haley Blvd., New Orleans, LA

Contact: Viola T. Johnson; violatjohnson@gmail.com, (504) 813-9008 or (504) 569-9070

 

Service Project at the Audubon Zoo

When: Monday August 30, 2010

Where: Audubon Zoon- Magazine and River Rd., New Orleans, LA

Contact: Mayor’s Office at mayor@cityofno.com

 

Love Louisiana Gospel Concert
Free gospel concert, worship service and family event aimed to restore peace and prosperity to the people of the Gulf Coast. Headlining: Earnest Pugh; worship service led by: Bishop J.D. Wiley.

When: Tuesday, August 31, 2010 6-10 pm

Where: Life Center Cathedral in Algiers, New Orleans

 

Service Project: Studio Renovation at Live Oaks Elementary School

When: Wednesday September 1, 2010

 

Care for Community: Cocktail Reception
Hosted by Warren Ballentine, Marc H. Morial & Rev. Al Sharpton. This event will honor Gulf Coast heroes including: Lenny Kravitz, Kimberly Roberts, Vincent Sylvain, Kevin Costner, Anderson Cooper, Spike Lee, Brad Pitt, David Banner, The Audubon Institutes "Storm Riders", Oliver Thomas, Bill Snape, Fishermen Scott Russell, Bradley Shivers and Mark Meade, Mr. George Rainey and Rev. Norman Brown. INVITE ONLY.

When: Thursday, September 2, 2010

 

Community Justice Parade
Sponsored by The Ordinary People’s Society (TOPS) National Justice Coalition, Prodigal Child Project, TOPS, New Bottom Line, Drug Policy Alliance

When: Saturday, September 4th, 2010 -10am-2pm

Where: Assemble at Houston County Courthouse; Parade 10 Blocks to TOPS Empowerment Center (805 North Lena Street)
Contact: 334.671.2882 or topssociety@yahoo.com

 

Kare for Kids
Presented by MTV Sucker Free Sundays Hosted by Samson of BET News, the Navigation Foundation and Batiste Cultural Arts Program at Live Oak Elementary School. Event will assemble at-risk youth from all across Louisiana for a lifestyle intervention. Invited speakers include: Master P, Silkk the Shocker, Lil Romeo, Baby, T.I., reality star Toya.

When: Saturday, September 4, 2010

Where: Live Oak Elementary School Cost: Free Event. Registration required: www.thenavigationfoundation.org.

 

After Sept 4, 2010

Swimming Upstream

Healing work, written by 16 New Orleans women, Swimming Upstream is a powerful theatrical production that tells the raw and soulful stories of women who lived through the flood with grace, rage, and strength, and great resiliency, punctuated by a flair for storytelling, humor and music that comes from being a New Orleanian.

When: Friday, September 10, 2010

Where: Mahalia Jackson Theater, 801 North Rampart Street, New Orleans, LA

Contact: Viola T. Johnson; violatjohnson@gmail.com, (504) 813-9008

 

Peace is Power: Giant Puppet Parade
This parade, in celebration of the International Day of Peace on Sept. 21, 2010 is a community pledge to a non-violent environment for the youth of New Orleans.

When: Saturday, Sept. 18, 2010 - 2-5pm.

Contact: Ahmane' Glover, 504-565-3596(o), 912-272-9388(c); aglover@afsc.org


Juvenile Justice Project of Louisiana’s Black and White Martini Soiree

When: Friday, September 24th from 7-10pm, New Orleans

Where: TBD; more information at www.jjpl.org

Posted via email from Decolonizing Environmentalism

Thursday, August 19, 2010

BP Gulf Oil Disaster / Tribal Youth - Houma Nation

this is why i do the work i do: young people's energy and vision, and wisdom, continue to inspire me and also constantly redefine the boundaries of imagination and "what is possible."
* * * * *

Tribal Youth Group Rises to Fight Problems Exacerbated by Oil Spill

With the BP crisis as their impetus, the 'Bayou Healers' aim to publicize environmental concerns and strengthen a weakened tribal identity
by Jacoba Charles - Aug 9th, 2010

GOLDEN MEADOWS, LA—The twisted silhouettes of leafless trees dot the marsh around the homeland of southern Louisiana's Houma tribe. Telephone poles list sideways in the water that laps at the edges of many roads.

It wasn't always this way. These changes to the landscape serve as stark symbols of the myriad social and environmental problems facing the tribe. Coastal erosion is rapidly gnawing away solid ground, while saltwater intrusion has killed vast numbers of oaks over the last forty years. And those are just a few of the problems faced by the tribe.

But the Bayou Healers, a tribal youth group that was conceived in the wake of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, plans to fight those challenges.

"We realized that it was important to have an organization that can bring awareness of what is happening here to outsiders, as well as to preserve our culture," said Jason Pitre, 25, who founded the organization along with 21-year-old Dana Solet.

Pitre and Solet say the inspiration to form Bayou Healers came in early July, when a delegation of native activists from Ecuador visited to share advice from their experiences of living in the shadow of the oil industry. The Ecuadorians, who are under the umbrella of environmental groups Rainforest Action Network and Amazon Watch, demonstrated the influence that can be gained through organization.

And so Pitre and Solet decided to organize. They immediately formed an advisory board made up of older members of the tribe, built a website and started the daunting paperwork to become a registered non-profit organization. They are now in the process of selecting a youth council, composed of tribe members from age 14 up through college, which will be the group's decision makers.

Widespread Support

Though the project began only a month ago, it has been met with enthusiastic support from the tribe.

"It's exciting to see and to be a part of," said Michael Dardar, a member of the group's advisory board. "I've committed myself to helping them in any way that I can, but it's nice to take a back seat and let the youth take the lead."

As word of the new project has spread among the 17,000 tribal members throughout the Houma's six-parish territory, young and old alike have been eager to get on board.

"People just haven't had the opportunity to participate in something like this over the years," said Kurt Charamie, who manages the tribe's radio station and also serves on the advisory board.

The group's first event, a candlelight vigil held at the end of July to commemorate the 100th day since the Deepwater Horizon explosion, was a well-attended success. Held on a sandy hill on the barrier island of Grand Isle, over 100 people from the local communities came to light candles, hear poems and speeches, and dance a shuffling friendship dance in the  twilight.

Pitre led the dance wearing full ceremonial garb, including a feathered headdress and fluorescent green tassels made from flagging tape. Young and old, tribe members and non-tribe-members stood together to hope for the future, honor the eleven lost lives and mourn for the damage to the environment.

Myriad Problems

But the Bayou Healers have their work cut out for them.

The Deepwater Horizon oil spill, which gushed crude into the ocean for some 90 days, has only added to the existing problems of the tribe.

Many Houma depend on the water for their livelihoods, and now they worry about making a living, as well as about their homes, their health and their future. Even as many fishing areas are declared safe, many tribe members say they are doubtful.

"When shrimping season starts, all those trawlers are going to catch tarballs," said tribe member RJ Molinere. "And I'm not going to call any of my customers that come down to fish alligators with me, because I’m not sure what's going on with the meat yet. I don't want to kill any of my customers, or get them sick."

Another ongoing worry for the tribe is coastal erosion. As 25 square miles of wetlands are lost each year, low-lying communities are rapidly losing their buffer against incoming storms. The Houma's traditional homeland is increasingly exposed to flooding and other storm damage. As hurricane season begins this year, they fear that oil-ridden floods will taint their homes.

Past hurricanes have already done their own form of damage to the Houma. As houses are lost, tribe members have scattered – moving to other towns that are farther inland or on higher ground. As this happens they have lost touch with the tribe, and tribal identity has been weakened.

"Katrina, Rita, Gustav and Ike spread everybody all over Timbuktu," Charamie said. "So many people are hurting so much that the last thing on their mind is contacting the tribe, therefore they don’t know what services we have to offer."

Bayou Healers hopes to help knit a far-flung tribe together. But having young people take a leadership role is also vitally important for the tribe's future, said Charamie. If the next generation doesn't work alongside older leaders, untold knowledge will be lost.

"If that institutional memory isn't carried on then we lose something vital." Charamie added. "Something like this is long overdue, and the oil spill really was the impetus."

Looking Toward the Future

Pitre and Solet say the scale of the challenges facing the tribe is both daunting and motivating. They plan to work on several fronts – through publicizing the issues, through preserving tribal knowledge and traditions and also through direct action.

Even as the organization is forming, the project's leaders are already digging in, literally.

One of Bayou Healers' first projects is transplanting the traditional medicinal herb garden of Pitre's grandfather, Whitney Dardar, to higher ground. Though some of the plants are common, Pitre said that there are others which he has never seen growing anywhere else. The tribe worries that if oily waters arrive with a storm, the medicine might be lost. And if not this year, then some time in the future – to a storm, to erosion or to some as-yet-unknown threat.

Pitre is learning the plants' traditional uses, while Bayou Healers has started shoveling the herbs out of Dardar's yard in Golden Meadows and moving them 35 miles north to another family member's yard.

In front of his low-slung house across the street from a swollen bayou, Dardar stoops beneath a rose bush to pluck a leaf off a small plant.

"It's a five-leaf vine," he explained. "You boil the leaf and make a strong tea; if you have a swollen arm or your leg is swollen, you wash yourself with this and it makes it go down."

When asked about the work that Pitre and Solet are doing, he pauses, a piece of another herb held in one weathered hand.

"I think it's a great thing," he said. "It's about time we get something like that for our tribe. I'm really proud of them."


# # #

Posted via email from Decolonizing Environmentalism

Monday, August 16, 2010

Hopeful: The proposals of “Peoples Agreement” in the texts for the UN negotiations on climate change

Big news. > August 16, 2010
> > After a week of negotiations, the main conclusions of the World Peoples Conference on Climate Change and the Right of Mother Earth (Cochabamba, April 2010) have been incorporated in the document of United Nations on Climate Change, that now have been recognized as a negotiation text for the 192 countries which has been congregated in Bonn, Germany, during the first week august of 2010. > > The most important points that have been incorporated for its consideration in the next round of negotiation before Cancun, that will take place in China, are: > > * 50 % reduction of greenhouse gasses emission by developed countries for second period of commitments from the Kyoto Protocol years 2013 to 2017. > * Stabilize the rise of temperature to 1 C and 300 parts for million of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. > * To guarantee an equitable distribution of atmospheric space, taking into account the climate debt of emissions by developed countries for developing countries. > * Full respect for the Human Rights and the inherent rights of indigenous peoples, women, children and migrants. > * Full recognition to the United Nations Declaration on of Indigenous Peoples Rights. > * Recognition and defense of the rights of Mother Earth to ensure harmony with nature. > * Guarantee the fulfillment of the commitments from the developed countries though the building of an International Court of Climate Justice. > * Rejection to the new mechanisms of carbon markets that transfer the responsibility of the reduction in emissions of greenhouse gases from developed countries to developing countries. > * Promotion of measures that change the consumption patterns of the developed countries. > * Adoption of necessary measures in all relevant forums to be excluded from the protection of the intellectual property rights to technologies and ecologically sustainable useful to mitigate climate change. > * Developed countries will allocate 6% of their national gross product to actions relatives to Climate Change. > * Integrated management of forest, to mitigation and adaptation, without market mechanics and ensuring the full participation of indigenous peoples and local communities. > * Prohibition the conversion of natural forest for plantations, since the monoculture plantations are not forest, instead should encourage the protection and conservation of natural forests. > >

Posted via email from Decolonizing Environmentalism

Friday, August 13, 2010

BREAKING: Labor Trafficking // Tennessee guest worker escapes and organizes

Just received an appeal from my companero who is an organizer with the New Orleans Workers Center for Racial Justice. This is a powerful case of solidarity and organizing that is happening among guest workers in Tennessee, in an organization that strongly values the work and vision of its worker members and Board.

PLEASE SUPPORT THE APPEAL AT ANY LEVEL YOU CAN!

Take care this weekend.
Diana

---------- Forwarded message ----------

Dear family and friends,


I'm writing to update you on the unfolding campaign of a brave member of ours who last night escaped a labor camp to blow the whistle on his company for human trafficking and forced labor. He and a huge network of union allies here in Nashville, TN launched a major campaign today to hold his company, Vanderbilt Landscaping, LLC responsible for exploiting him and others while at the same time receiving federal stimulus dollars and state contracts. Below are two stories from today's action.

I'm also attaching an appeal for support of our STRIKE fund for this brave worker while he fights to hold the company accountable,

-----

Immigrant Accuses Company Of Human Trafficking

Posted: Aug 12, 2010 2:31 PM CDT Thursday, August 12, 2010 3:31 PM EST Updated: Aug 12, 2010 7:08 PM CDT Thursday, August 12, 2010 8:08 PM EST

Video Gallery


Mexican workers for TDOT contractor claim abuse

By TRAVIS LOLLER Associated Press Writer
Published: Thursday, August 12, 2010 at 5:09 p.m.
Last Modified: Thursday, August 12, 2010 at 5:09 p.m.

A Mexican guest worker says a landscaping company with Tennessee state contracts and a federal stimulus loan guarantee held him and fellow workers like indentured servants, confiscating their passports and subjecting them to constant surveillance by managers who were often armed.


Hilario Razura Jimenez said in an interview that he was rescued from Vanderbilt Landscaping's company housing Wednesday night by staff from the Alliance of Guestworkers for Dignity. He waited until everyone else was asleep before sneaking out at about midnight, he said. Staff with the New Orleans-based nonprofit were in touch with him by text message and drove out to pick him up.

Alliance executive director Saket Soni said company officials last week put another worker on a bus back to Mexico when they learned that he had been talking with their group.

A person who answered the phone at the company on Thursday said he would not comment on the allegations and refused to give his name. The company, which has $2.4 million in state Transportation Department contracts and a $900,000 a stimulus loan guarantee from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, has offices in Smyrna and Mason.

Jimenez said he has come to the U.S. on an H2B guestworker visa twice before. Both times the pay and conditions were exploitative, but he came again because he was desperate.

The 35-year-old comes from the town of Ruiz in Nayarit, Mexico, and supports his wife and three children on what he can earn picking tobacco and beans.

"I'm suffering here, but (my family) in Mexico, they're OK. The little I send keeps them from going without," he said in Spanish. "But there comes a point where you get fed up and say, 'Enough!'"

At the company housing in Smyrna, 13 or 14 people are lodged in a small house with one bathroom and no beds, Jimenez said. Workers built their own beds, he said. They each pay $100 a month rent, which is deducted from their pay.

They routinely were driven to the office at 6 a.m. and sometimes did not return until 8 p.m., but were not paid for any of the time spent waiting for assignments, going between the office and worksites or cleaning and maintaining the equipment, Jimenez said. Paychecks were often for only about 25 hours of work a week.

Jimenez said he had to borrow money to come to the U.S. and last year he did not earn enough to pay back what he had borrowed. With interest, he owed 25,000 pesos (about $2,000) from last year's trip when he came to the U.S. this May. And he had to borrow even more money make this year's trip.

"Many people don't complain because they'll be fired, and they can't go back to Mexico because they owe lots of money in Mexico," he said. "That's why most people won't leave. They just put up with it."

On Thursday afternoon, Alliance director Soni said they were filing complaints against Vanderbilt Landscaping with the Tennessee Department of Transportation and the federal Justice and Labor departments. The complaints include allegations that the company is in violation of a number of state and federal laws, including those against trafficking, forced labor and kidnapping.

The group also held a demonstration and marched to Vanderbilt Landscaping offices in Smyrna to demand Jimenez's passport and final paycheck.

A man answering the door, whom Jimenez identified at Joffrey Vanderbilt, one of the owners, threatened to call the police, but he allowed two of the demonstrators to enter the building and retrieve the passport and check.

Marilyn Brown from the Tennessee branch of the NAACP, was one of them. She said Jimenez's passport was bundled with many others, and the man she spoke with there told her the workers had voluntarily handed over their passports for safekeeping.

Alliance organizer Daniel Castellanos, a native of Peru, said he paid $5,000 in 2006 to come to the U.S. as a guestworker helping to rebuild New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. He said the entire guestworker program needs to be overhauled because it invites exploitation.

"We suffered the same or worse treatment (as Jimenez)," he said. Guestworkers are "a captive labor force - disposable."

TDOT spokeswoman Julie Oaks said in an e-mail that most of the claims made about Vanderbilt Landscaping were outside the purview of the Transportation Department, but it was preparing to review the company's payroll records.

"If the contractor is proven to be in violation of any of the TDOT specifications the department can bar them for future work," she wrote.


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Dear Allies,

 

As guestworkers and members of the national steering committee of the Alliance of Guestworkers for Dignity, we are writing with an urgent request for support.  We need to raise a critical action fund for a brave group of guestworkers in Tennessee.  These workers are launching a powerful campaign to expose their employers’ criminal actions.  With your support we will sustain the workers’ heroic actions, support them through the retaliation we know is coming, and translate their courage into an important national policy victory.  Information about how make an online check donation is below.

 

Our members in Tennessee come from rural Mexico.  They were brought to your country, legally, as “guestworkers” on the H2B visa program.  Our members report that the company that brought them seized the workers’ passports when they arrived in Tennessee, and subjected them to horrific housing and working conditions.  They report that company management use threats, retaliation, and carry guns on site to create an environment of terror for the workers.  Despite these conditions, the workers are organizing. 

 

As soon as the company learned of their organizing effort, they deported one organizer, and threatened others with retaliation. But despite the threats, the visible weapons, and the surveillance, the workers are continuing to fight for their basic rights.  They are now preparing to hold their employer accountable.

 

Please support them in their heroic efforts.  Your contributions will be used for direct support in the workers’ actions.  The funds will be used to help them escape to safety from their employer, and launch and run a ten day drive to hold them accountable at the state and federal level.

 

You can make a secure online donation to their campaign at www.nowcrj.org.  You can make a contribution by writing a check to the New Orleans Workers’ Center for Racial Justice with the note “Tennessee” in the memo.  For more information about the Alliance of Guestworkers for Dignity, please visit www.nowcrj.org to read about our work with H-2B workers.  You can also contact our organizer, Jacob Horwitz, at 504 452 9159, or jhorwitz@nowcrj.org.

 

Thank you in advance for your solidarity and support!

 

Daniel Castellanos

Sarvanan Chelvan

Toribio Jiménez

Aby Raju

Jose Sanchez

 

Members of the National Steering Committee,

Alliance of Guestworkers for Dignity

Posted via email from Decolonizing Environmentalism