Mandate from Amazonian Women Grassroots Defenders of the Rainforest Against the Extractive Economic Model

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Mandate from Amazonian Women Grassroots Defenders of the Rainforest Against the Extractive Economic Model Mandate from Amazonian Women Grassroots Defenders of the Rainforest Against the Extractive Economic Model We grassroots Amazonian women defenders of the rainforest against the extractive economic model resort for the second time to the President of Ecuador, to explain to you our mandate. Considering: That the Ecuadorian state is signatory to important international conventions and declarations for the rights of indigenous peoples such as: Convention 169 of the International Labor Organization, the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, the American Declaration on Indigenous Peoples, and the Ecuadorian Constitution establishes in Article 417 that “The international treaties ratified by Ecuador shall be subject to the provisions set forth in the Constitution.”. Article 426 mentions that, “The rights enshrined in the Constitution and international human rights instruments shall be for immediate observance and enforcement. The absence of a law or lack of knowledge about the norms cannot be alleged to justify the violation of rights and guarantees enshrined in the Constitution”. We’re not talking about any kind of consent, but instead demanding that respect should be accorded to our right to self-determination and to the international standards established regarding consultation and consent, as that established in the Inter-American Court’s ruling in the case of Sarayaku vs the State of Ecuador. Given that “prior consultation” was a process entirely corrupted and manipulated by the Secretariat of Hydrocarbons, that in no way revealed the position of the communities and the legitimate organizations that are legally recognized by their base communities. Far from there being a commitment to respect the indigenous peoples’ social organizations, the Ecuadorian government initiated an aggressive process of disregarding the real organizations and leaders, while legalizing organizations and persons in the service of the extractive project in the Amazon, stimulating violent actions particularly against indigenous women leaders. In the implementation of the extractive and oil projects included the South Eastern Round and the concession of Blocks 79, 83, 28 and the expansion of Block 10; and additionally, with the launch of mining operations and concessions to the Chinese companies EcuaCorriente SA (ECSA), the Lowell corporation, Ecuadolidos, the Belarusian Oil Company, Andes Petroleum, and CELAC, EP; our rights were not respected. Considering that in order for mining companies to enter Shuar territory they violated the fundamental human rights to life, they militarized and continue to militarize the territory, provoking displacement and harassment of the Shuar families in order to facilitate mining operations. The indigenous leaders who were opposed to the implementation of the mining projects were criminalized and continue to be persecuted. They have had to abandon their families and territories, and hide in the rainforest. Given this, we women of the Amazon are demanding compliance with the following mandate: 1. We women reject and consider illegal and illegitimate any contract or signed agreement of leaders or representatives of local governments with the government and / or oil, mining, hydroelectric, or logging companies, given that we ​ are more than 50% of the indigenous population, we are the carriers of life and we take care of our families and Mother Earth. 2. We demand annulment of contracts / agreements and extractive concessions granted by the Ecuadorian government to oil and mining companies in the south-central Amazon, and demand that indigenous peoples and territories be declared free from extractive activities like oil, mining, hydroelectric dams and logging. 3. We reject the new licitation of 16 oil blocks in the South Western Oil Round within the territories of the Andoas, Achuar, Shuar, Kichwa, Shiwiar, Waorani, and Sapara indigenous peoples. 4. We demand the annulment of contracts for Blocks 79, 83, 74, 75, and 28 given that we don’t accept and won’t accept any kind of extractive project in our territories, according to resolutions written under our right to self determination. 5. As indigenous women we reject the information sharing or “consultations” for extractive projects, because in our decision-making spaces we have already decided NO more extractive projects in our territories, employing our right to self-determination. Furthermore, the “information sharing and consultations” do not comply and will never comply with international standards for free, prior, and informed consultation and consent, as established in the Sarayaku case against the Ecuadorian government. Extractive projects generate big internal conflicts that put at risk the survival of the most vulnerable indigenous peoples like the Sapara, indigenous peoples in voluntary isolation and women of the Amazonian nationalities. 6. We deeply reject the expansion of AGIP Oil’s operations in Block 10 in the areas of Jimpikit y Morete Cocha within Kichwa, Sapara, Sarayaku, Shuar, and Achuar territory. 7. We demand the end to the sources of pollution that affect Villano and Curaray Rivers, in addition to the complete reparations of the territories and communities affected by AGIP Oil in Block 10, after 28 years of operations. 8. We demand an end to all sources of contamination and complete environmental and social reparation, in addition to the recognition of and payment of ecological debt. Also, we demand the respective indemnities for damages caused in the indigenous territories of the Siocopay, Siona, Cofan, Kichwa, Shuar, Waorani peoples, and campesino communities of the Northern Amazon, Sucumbios and Orellana provinces. 9. We demand the cancellation and annulment of contracts between the Ecuadorian state and oil companies in Block 28, which impact the sources of the most important watersheds of the central Amazon, putting at risk the lives and survival of indigenous peoples and nationalities that live in the basins of the Yuracyaku, Anzu, Pastaza, Aranjuno, Bobonaza, Villano, Puyo, Pindo, and Alpayacu Rivers. 10. We demand that there is NO expansion of oil and logging activities in the Yasuní Park, our home and the ancestral territories of the Tagaeri, Taromenani, and Waorani peoples, to guarantee the life and survival of the communities, averting the collective ethnocide of the indigenous peoples in voluntary isolation in the Ecuadorian Amazon. 11. We demand the nullification of contracts / agreements for mining projects in the territories of Warints, Nankints, Panantza, Tundayme, Kutuku, Shaimi, and Condor Mirador in the province of Morona Santiago and Zamora Chinchipe. 12. We demand the nullification of concessions for the mining companies Ecuacorrientes (ECSA), Ecuasolidos, Lowell, in the ancestral territories of Shuar, Achuar, and Saraguro peoples and campesinos from the provinces of Morona Santiago and Zamora Chinchipe. 13. We reject the construction of the hydroelectric dam of the company CELEC EP, in Morona Santiago. 14. We demand that the authorities take the necessary measures to guarantee the security and protection of indigenous women leaders and their families based in our territories, who are currently being threatened for the actions they have taken as human rights and environmental defenders, as in the case of Patricia Gualinga (leader from Sarayaku), Nema Grefa (President of the Sapara Nation of Ecuador), Alicia Cahuiya (Waorani leader), Gloria Ushigua (Sapara leader), Margoth Escobar (human rights and environmental activist), amongst others. 15. We demand respect for our organizational structures and the process of naming leaders without the intervention of the Secretariat of Public Management into our spaces and our democratic and legitimate decision-making processes, as occured in the case of Nema Grefa, President of the Sapara Nationality and the case of Timoteo Wamoni of the Waorani Nationality. 16. We demand respect from the Ecuadorian government for the women’s organizations created under our own laws, and in consideration of our self-determination. 17. We demand the immediate withdrawal of the military and police presence from Nankints, Taisha, Tundayme, Pananza, Kutuku, and Shaimi, ancestral territory of the Shuar and Achuar nationalities, in the province of Zamora Chinchipe. 18. We demand amnesties for our colleagues from the Shuar nationality that have been displaced and politically persecuted, so that they may return to their communities of Nankits and Tundayme - Angel Nantip, Domingo Ankuash, José Esach, Luis Tiwiran, Esteban Pandam, Pepe Acacho, and other male and female leaders. 19. We demand that the Ecuadorian State ask forgiveness for the murders of leaders like Bosco Wisum, Fredy Taish, and others, and sanction the responsible parties. 20. We require a statistical study and investigation into the cases of physical and sexual violence against Amazon indigenous women, including prostitution, to create a public policy that is specific to the Ecuadorian Amazonian context regarding Amazon indigenous women of the different nationalities, along with those in the cities and communities, to prevent violence provoked by the migration of our communities. 21. We demand a thorough and historic investigation into sexual and gender-related violence associated with oil and mining activities and militarization, in order to apply necessary sanctions and to provide guarantees that they are not repeated within indigenous territories. 22. We demand compliance with the constitutional rights of non-discrimination
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