Business Day

Ecuador’s Siekopai people to reoccupy Amazon homeland after 80 years’ exile

• Government to issue property title and an apology

- Anastasia Moloney /Thomson Reuters Foundation

THE PROPERTY TITLE IS A WAY TO ... GUARANTEE THAT TERRITORIE­S WILL BE RESPECTED BY THE STATE AND INVADING SETTLERS

After an eight-decade struggle to regain control of their ancestral lands in Ecuador’s Amazon rainforest, the indigenous Siekopai people are set to return after a historic court ruling ordered the government to grant the community property titles.

Under the November ruling, Ecuador’s environmen­t ministry is expected to issue a land title to the Siekopai by April for more than 42,000ha of land, along with a public apology for violating their rights.

“We’ve been demanding that the government complies with the constituti­on that recognises ancestral lands are the property of indigenous communitie­s,” said Justino Piaguaje, a leader of the Siekopai people, whose flooded forests — largely lagoons and swamps — are on the border between Ecuador and Peru.

“The ruling is recognitio­n of a historic fight that goes back to our grandparen­ts,” he said.

However, implementi­ng the court ruling could be hampered by the violence convulsing the country that led to President Daniel Noboa last week declaring a war on drug gangs and a state of emergency.

Once the court ruling is carried out, it would be the first time in Ecuador that an indigenous community, whose ancestral territory overlaps land protected by the state, has been given title deeds.

Other groups could also benefit from the ruling. More than 12-million hectares of indigenous territory are part of

Ecuador’s national parks or protected areas and does not have land titles, according to campaign group Amazon Frontlines.

“This is a precedent that opens the door for the defence of all indigenous territorie­s across the Amazon,” said Jorge Acero, a lawyer for the Siekopai who is part of the Amazon Frontlines legal team.

FORCED

The Siekopai were forced to flee their ancestral lands during the 1941 Peru-Ecuador war, and later prevented from returning when the Ecuadorean government made the land part of a wildlife reserve in 1979, without the group’s consent.

During hearings at a provincial court, the Siekopai provided evidence of the boundaries of their remote and largely pristine homeland, which they call Pe’keya in their language, known as Paicoca.

Using cameras, GPS receivers, satellite imagery and aerial drones, the community georeferen­ced and documented the extent of their territory and identified sacred sites.

The Siekopai are one of 14 recognised indigenous groups in Ecuador, with a small population of 800 hunter-gatherers inside the country and 1,200 more in neighbouri­ng Peru.

As the world tries to put COP28 climate goals in practice, including a deal to move away from fossil fuel energy, respecting indigenous land rights and formalisin­g indigenous land tenure can be a key climate solution, analysts say.

A growing body of scientific research shows that recognisin­g and enforcing land rights for indigenous peoples, and valuing their expertise and governance systems, are vital for nature conservati­on and the protection of the Amazon rainforest.

A 2021 UN report found that in nearly every Latin American country, indigenous lands showed lower deforestat­ion rates than other areas.

Scientists say the Amazon rainforest may be close to a tipping point, driven by clearances to make way for agricultur­e and cattle pastures, which could dry out the region and transform it into savannah in the coming decades.

Protecting the world’s largest rainforest, a vast natural store of carbon, can help slow climate change, which is powering more and more heatwaves, wildfires, floods, droughts and storms across the globe.

Giving land titles to indigenous groups and bolstering their rights also mean it is far more likely oil deposits scattered across Ecuador’s Amazon rainforest will stay in the ground —a key to meeting goals to curb climate change.

Siekopai land is a biodiverse “oasis” home to Amazon river dolphins, giant otters and manatees, surrounded by oil drilling and oil palm plantation­s, said Piaguaje.

“There’s pressure all around us and ... if the state discovers oil on our land the government must carry out a free, prior and informed consultati­on with us,” he said. “But we’ll never accept or agree to oil exploitati­on or any type of extractive industry on our lands.”

Across Ecuador’s oil and gold-rich Amazon rainforest, other indigenous groups have successful­ly pushed back developmen­t projects following a series of legal victories.

In August, Ecuadorian­s voted in a milestone national referendum to ban oil drilling in a part of the Amazon — the Yasuni National Park — home to indigenous communitie­s, along with gold mining in a forest outside of the capital Quito.

In November, Ecuador state oil company Petroecuad­or said it planned to gradually shut down a large drilling project in the Yasuni reserve following the referendum.

Since 2018, Ecuador’s top court has ruled in favour of another indigenous group, the Cofan of Sinangoe, and the Waorani living in the eastern Amazon province of Pastaza, to block the developmen­t of extractive projects on their land.

Having land titles allows indigenous groups greater say and control over their lands and the ability to push back settlers.

“The property title is a way to give judicial security to communitie­s over territorie­s, to guarantee that territorie­s will be respected by the state and invading settlers,” said Acero.

“It guarantees the physical and cultural survival of peoples and nationalit­ies,” he said.

Without reclaiming and returning to their land — seen as central to Siekopai spirituali­ty, memory and knowledge — the risk is that “a millennia culture disappears”, warned Piaguaje.

“The ruling will help us revive our memory and cultural practices, to reconnect with our spiritual world. It allows us to promote our culture that is conserving nature based on millennia of wisdom of our grandfathe­rs,” said Piaguaje.

“We’ll return to rebuild our home,” he said.

 ?? ?? Living green: In nearly every Latin American country, land belonging to indigenous peoples was deforested at a far slower rate than areas where they had little presence, UN research in 2021 found. /123RF/altitudevi­sual
Living green: In nearly every Latin American country, land belonging to indigenous peoples was deforested at a far slower rate than areas where they had little presence, UN research in 2021 found. /123RF/altitudevi­sual

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa