Colombian
court orders Ecopetrol to halt production on Bari land
By:
Lisa Garrigues
Indian Country TODAY
LA
PAZ
Petroleumworld.com
03 28 07
In a victory for the Bari people of Colombia, the national constitutional
court has ordered the state oil company Ecopetrol to halt oil production
on their land.
According to the judgment, ''We have observed not
just damage to the fundamental right of the Motilon Bari Indigenous
People to be consulted beforehand, but profound harm to the legitimate
confidence that traditional authorities have deposited in government
authorities.''
The judgment was first reported Feb. 2 in the Colombian
newspaper La Republica, and later confirmed by Ecopetrol officials,
who have not commented on the decision.
It called for the suspension of oil exploration in
the Alamo 1 installation in the municipality of Gebarra, in Norte
de Santander, and asked for the Minister of Defense to provide the
necessary support to ensure company compliance with the judgment.
Though lawyers for the Bari praised the judgment,
they also questioned why the Bari had to wait so long for a response
to their complaints while Ecopetrol, which is currently undergoing
privatization, continued oil exploration on their territory.
The suit, filed in October 2005, claimed that Ecopetrol
began exploration in Bari territory without first consulting with
leaders of the community or checking to see if indigenous people lived
on the land, and did no environmental studies on the impact of their
exploration.
The Colombian Ministries of the Environment, Interior
and Justice, Territorial Development and Defense, who gave permission
for Ecopetrol to begin exploration, were also named in the suit.
In a statement sent last year to the court and the
Colombian government, Chief Gonzalo Arabadora of the Motilon Bari
Community Association said oil exploration was taking place on sacred
land where Bari ceremonies were performed.
He also said the Bari were insulted, beaten and forbidden
from speaking their language by soldiers who guarded the oil installations
on their territories and prevented the Bari from entering their ceremonial
grounds.
Around 1,000 Colombian soldiers are stationed in the
war-torn territory of the Bari.
The U.S. government provides funding for Colombia's
armed forces under its drug eradication program Plan Colombia, which
has facilitated the expansion of multinational oil companies in the
region as well as the privatization of Ecopetrol.
In addition to the lawsuit, the Bari conducted a letter-writing
campaign and demonstrations against Ecopetrol and
the Colombian government, including a demonstration on Oct. 12, 2006,
in which 700 people marched to the nearby town of Tibu carrying bows
and arrows; and one Bari leader asked, ''Why is the Colombian state
not respecting our rights?''
Ashcayra Acrora, another Bari leader, has said, ''Mother
Earth is a living being; we cannot understand this type of activity
and we oppose it. Many animals in our region have disappeared. Life
is the Earth, she maintains life; life is water and sun; for us, oil
is a problem. It brings us a lot of violence. Together with the oil
companies come armed groups.''
The court judgment said Colombian government officials
had ignored ''the obligation to meet with the claimants in good faith,
to respect their rights, to not abuse their own prerogatives, to defend
and propagate human rights, to maintain the peace and to protect the
natural resources of the country.''
Lawyers claim other companies, like the CGL, the Geophysical
Company of Latin America, are exploring the region and will not be
affected by the judgment.
The Bari are not the only one of Colombia's indigenous
peoples that have been opposing oil exploration on their territory.
Others include the Guahibo and the U'Wa, who suffered
a setback in December when Colombia's Interior Ministry allowed Ecopetrol
to begin explorations on their territory on behalf of the Spanish
company Repsol.
Attorney Melisa Ballesteros said the court order to
cease production was significant, not just for the Bari but for other
indigenous peoples in Colombia.
''This not only sets a precedent for Ecopetrol,''
she told the Web site Actualidad Etnica, ''but also for the Ministry
of Interior and Justice in their certification of the presence of
indigenous peoples on territories where they are planning projects
like this; and for the Ministry of Environment who gives environmental
licenses to projects that involve indigenous people.''
TODAY
26
03 07
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