In Ecuador, protesting for the rights of the Earth and trying to preserve natural resources may make you a "terrorist."
By Manuela Picq
It's becoming tricky to identify "terrorists," at least in Ecuador. They are not members of criminal organisations, they don't spread fear or target civilians, nor have a politically motivated agenda. According to President Correa, "terrorists" are those opposing Ecuador's development. So today's "terrorism" might just look like indigenous peoples peacefully taking over the streets, with their ancestral knowledge and values, to demand environmental and social rights.
In Ecuador, "terrorists" are indigenous peoples from the Amazon and the Andean highlands fighting to preserve access to water in their communities. Old penal codes written in times of dictatorship are being revived by leftist presidents to repress indigenous activists. As "terrorists," they are labelled as enemies of the state, and arrested--by the very president that claimed leftist credentials and staged his inauguration in overtly ethnic style.
When the Continental Summit of Indigenous Peoples and Nationalities of Abya Yala gathered delegations from the entire hemisphere in Ecuador last month, the focus was on the criminalisation of environmental protest.
For more on the subject, see:
Indians, terrorists = US enemies
How people get labeled "terrorists"
Obama: Bin Laden was "Geronimo"
US considers Aboriginal groups threats
Seminoles compared to al Qaeda
and it's not just in the America's. Here it is a right wing govt painting Indigenous, environmentalists and other activists as 'terrorists'.
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