June 19, 2009
Washington, D.C.—After two years of brutal government repression and destruction of their homeland, the Ngöbe Indians of western Panama won a major victory yesterday as the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights called on Panama to suspend all work on a hydroelectric dam that threatens the Ngöbe homeland. The Chan-75 Dam is being built across the Changuinola River by the government of Panama and a subsidiary of the Virginia-based energy giant AES Corporation.
June 19, 2009
After months of protests by Indigenous Peoples and weeks of violence, Peru's Congress has revoked laws that would have opened Indigenous lands in the Amazon to development. The controversial laws, passed to implement a free trade agreement with the US, were revoked by a margin of 82-12 after a five-hour debate. Hailing victory, Amazonian Indian groups said it was an "historic day". Read more
June 11, 2009
The Kenyan police actions against Samburu communities in northern Kenya that began in February resumed on June 5 and 6, after Borana and Somali raiders tried to take the few remaining cattle of a party of Samburu at a river crossing. Because the police confiscated almost all their animals in the earlier assaults, the Samburu were desperate to keep the few calves left to them, and they fought with the raiders and took their weapons. That conflict left nine people dead.
June 08, 2009
The continuing protests by Indigenous Peoples in the Peruvian Amazon (see the action alert on our home page)exploded into violence over the weekend, leaving both protestors and police dead. The government has now imposed a military-enforced curfew on the state and has arrested more than 70 Indigenous people. For more information go here.
May 27, 2009
The National Native Language Revitalization Summit that Cultural Survival co-organized this May was by almost any measure, a great success. Nearly 300 people from across Indian Country gathered for three days of eduction, advocacy, and celebration. Read more.
Since April 9th communities in the Peruvian Amazon have been protesting new laws passed by President Alan Garcia's government that usher in the Free Trade Agreement with the United States and authorize an unprecedented wave of extractive industries into the Amazon Rainforest.
Cultural Survival Quarterly
Winter 2008