And now:LISN <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

Subject: U'wa v Occidental Petroleum
Date: Sun, 29 Aug 1999 22:55:54 -0400
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 
   COLOMBIA: August 26, 1999
   
   BOGOTA - Colombia's U'wa Indians said they would continue their
   long-running battle to prevent Occidental Petroleum Corp. from
   drilling for oil in a region they see as ancestral homelands. 
   
   Under Colombia's Constitution, the U.S.-based multinational will not
   be allowed to explore in about 50 percent of the block that overlaps
   with the 543,000-acre (220,000-hectare) U'wa reservation that the
   government formally approved last week.
   
   But the U'was also said they would resist all Occidental's plans in a
   much wider area that does not fall within the reserve, but which they
   still consider ancestral homelands.
   
   "The U'was' position is not to allow any oil exploration or
production
   (on its ancestral lands) either inside or outside the territory that
   has been legally recognised as ours," said a statement issued by the
   U'was.
   
   The U'was' decision to keep fighting oil exploration in parts of
   central Boyaca, northern Santander and Norte de Santander and
   northeastern Arauca provinces seems likely to cause renewed
   frustration for Occidental. In 1992, Occidental was first granted
   exploration rights to the Samore Block, which it believes could
   harbour potential reserves of between 1.5 billion and 2.5 billion
   barrels of crude.
   
   But the 7,000-strong U'wa community, whose reservation previously
   covered 98,800 acres (40,000 hectares), mounted a tough fight, backed
   by international campaigners, to protect what they traditionally
   consider the "blood of Mother Earth" and thereby forcing Occidental
to
   suspend all operations.
   
   Occidental is still waiting for government approval to sink its first
   test well, at a cost of about $30 million, in part of the Samore
Block
   that is just outside the enlarged Indian reservation. There was no
   official comment from Occidental about the prospect that the wrangle
   could continue but one senior executive said, "This must be
clarified.
   We just don't know what is going to happen."
   
   REUTERS NEWS SERVICE

Reply via email to