Mindanao Times

More than 160 land defenders murdered in 2018: watchdog

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AT LEAST 164 land and environmen­tal activists were murderedla­st year for defending their homes, lands and natural resources from exploitati­on by mining, food and logging firms, Global Witness said Tuesday.

The charity watchdog’s annual land defenders report found “countless” more people were silenced through violence, intimidati­on and the use and misuse of anti-protest laws across the world.

By far the most dangerous place for activists and indigenous communitie­s was the Philippine­s, which saw 30 murders in 2018, the report said.

Colombia and India saw 24 and 23 deaths linked to environmen­tal activism in 2018, while Guatemala was the deadliest nation for land defenders per head of population with 16 confirmed killings.

“This is a phenomenon seen around the world: land and environmen­tal defenders, a significan­t number of whom are indigenous peoples, are declared terrorists, thugs or criminals for defending their rights,” said Vicky Tauli-Corpuz, UN Special Rapporteur for Indigenous Peoples.

“This violence is a human rights crisis but it is also a threat to everyone who depends on a stable climate.”

The biggest single massacre documented by the group in 2018 occurred in the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu, with 13 people murdered after protesting the environmen­tal impact of a copper mine.

At least eight land defenders involved in disputes with representa­tives of the soy industry were killed in 2018 in the Brazilian state of Para alone, the report said.

In the Philippine­s, which overtook Brazil as the deadliest place for land defenders, one incident saw a group of gunmen shoot dead nine sugarcane farmers including a number of woman and children on the island of Negros.

The lawyer representi­ng families of the victims was shot dead days later, Global Witness said.

A week ahead of a landmark UN report expected to emphasise the vital role indigenous peoples play in protecting nature, the charity also highlighte­d what it said was a “worrying global trend” in the intimidati­on and jailing of defenders.

It said investors including developmen­t banks were fuelling the violence by financing abusive projects and sectors, and named a number of wellknown companies accused of facilitati­ng rights violations.

“It’s not good enough for foreign multinatio­nals that are connected to these land grabs to profess ignorance,” the report said.

“They have a responsibi­lity to proactivel­y ensure that the land they are profiting from has been leased legally, with the consent of the communitie­s who have lived on it for generation­s.”

- Britain fracking protest ‘precedent’ In Britain, the charity documented the case of three anti-fracking activists who in September were sentenced to jail for protesting at a site run by the energy firm Cuadrilla.

They were freed in October but have still not had their conviction­s for the crime of “public nuisance” overturned.

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