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

Subject: IEN Statement on Deaths
Date: Thu, 11 Mar 1999 11:55:41 -0800 (PST)
From: Tom Goldtooth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
CC: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED],
[EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED],[EMAIL PROTECTED],
[EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED],
[EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED],
[EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], 

More information on the Colombia murder and details on the funeral
arrangements of Ingrid, Terry and Lahe'ena'e could be found on IEN web
site
- page:  http://www.alphacdc.com/ien/colombia.html

You could go to the page indirectly by going to: 
http://www.alphacdc.com/ien



STATEMENT OF THE INDIGENOUS ENVIRONMENTAL NETWORK
March 11, 1999

The Indigenous Environmental Network expresses its deep sense of loss
over
the death squad style execution of three activists on a cultural
education
outreach visit to the U'wa tribe within their ancestral territory in
Colombia, South America.  We are calling for a prompt international
investigation into actions of the Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de
Colombia (FARC), which went on record on March 10, 1999 for taking
responsibility for the March 4, 1999 murder of Ingrid Washinawatok,
co-chair
of the Indigenous Women's Network, Lahe'ena'e Gay, chair of the Pacific
Cultural Conservancy International, and Terence Freitas, coordinator
with
the U'wa Defense Working Group.  As part of this investigation, we are
also
requesting the investigation include the roles of the Colombian military
and
allied paramilitaries, Occidental Petroleum, and the U.S. State
Department
whose historical and current actions may have contributed to the
violence in
Colombia as well as specific actions that contributed to these deaths. 
We
also demand an immediate end to all U.S. assistance to the Colombian
military and security forces, including training and drug eradication
efforts.  

These three brave activists gave their lives defending the rights of the
U'wa to live their lives as they have since time immemorial, free from
the
genocidal devastation of oil drilling on their lands and the
intimidation
and terror of Colombian military and paramilitary forces.  We must
insure
that their lives were not given in vain, and therefore demand that
Occidental Petroleum withdraw its application to drill on ancestral U'wa
lands.  We welcome the March 1, 1999 statement by the company that it
will
suspend operations in the area until the issue is resolved and urge OXY
officials to cooperate with any investigation towards resolving this
issue.
Even in light of FARC taking responsibility of the murders, many
questions
remain and this issue isn't yet resolved. 

We wish to thank United Nations High Commissioner of Human Rights Mary
Robinson for her prompt efforts condemning the brutal murders of the
three
human rights activists and her urging authorities to fully investigate
the
murders and bring the perpetrators to justice.  We call upon her office
to
either conduct or insure for the monitoring of an independent and
thorough
investigation into this matter.  

There remains the strong possibility that these human rights activists
were
killed in retaliation for the overall policies and historical actions of
a
government which has been the enemy of indigenous peoples of Colombia.
This
underscores the need at the international level to allow indigenous
peoples
to define their status with regard to the nation states which have
continually usurped them by adopting the UN Draft Declaration on the
Rights
of Indigenous Peoples in full and without modification.  We call on the
United States in particular to end its efforts at the international
level to
obstruct adoption of the Draft Declaration and acknowledge the inherent
rights of all indigenous peoples to full self-determination. 

Colombia has the worst human rights status of any nation in the Western
Hemisphere today.  Politically motivated killings in Colombia range from
3,000 to 4,000 a year. Environmental, indigenous and human rights
activists
know the growing oil infrastructure in Colombia has acted as a magnet
for
violence. The U'wa tribal peoples believe that oil is the blood of their
mother and is viewed as sacred.  Too much human blood has been spilled
by
those who see it as merely a source of profit.  Perhaps this incident
could
bring light to the need for investigation and action to stop this
violence
against the indigenous peoples and all people and visitors of Colombia
and
the Americas.


####################################################

Indigenous Environmental Network - National Office
P.O. Box 485
Bemidji, Minnesota  56619-0485  USA
Phone: (218) 751-4967
Fax: (218) 751-0561
e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Web Site: http://www.alphacdc.com/ien


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