And now:[EMAIL PROTECTED] (S.I.S.I.S.) writes:

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From: Native Americas Journal <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Monday, March 15, 1999
Subject: 5,000 U'was In Colombia Say They Will
Commit Suicide if Occidental Drills

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The following article is provided by Native Americas, published by the
Akwe:kon Press at Cornell University. For more information on how to stay
informed of emerging trends that impact Native peoples throughout the
hemisphere visit our website. URL: http://nativeamericas.aip.cornell.edu
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5,000 U'WAS IN COLOMBIA SAY THEY WILL
COMMIT SUICIDE IF OCCIDENTAL DRILLS

By Bruce Johansen/Native Americas

At least 5,000 U'was, a semi-nomadic Native tribe in Columbia's
mountains, have stopped exploration for oil in their homeland by
threatening to walk, en masse, off a 1,400-foot cliff to their deaths.
Occidental Petroleum seems to have been stymied, at least for a time,
by the ultimatum.

The threatened mass suicide became an issue at Oxy's 1997 shareholders'
meeting in Santa Monica, near Los Angeles, as a representative of the
U'was toured the United States in the company of several environmental
groups. "This oil belongs to the land, and cannot be taken from it,"
Roberto Cobaria told audiences in the United States. U'wa land is
estimated to hold 1.5 billion barrels of oil, most of which Oxy would
like to export to the United States.

Oxy, which has approval from the Colombia's government, asserts that
the U'was have been forced to risk their lives by  local anti-government
guerrillas who are looking for publicity. Oxy's spin doctors have not
studied the U'was' history, however. Four centuries ago, a portion of
the tribe jumped off a sacred cliff rather than submit to Spanish
colonial rule.

Oxy already operates the Cano oil field in Colombia, which delivers
an average of 180,000 barrels of oil a day. This field, which makes
Colombia self-sufficient in oil, is being depleted, thus the government's
interest in opening a new oilfield at Samore, in the region that the
U'was call home. The government also is looking for a way to control
the countryside, where its authority is challenged not only by political
opposition and environmental activism, but also by drug-inspired
criminal activity.

Under Colombian law, the U'was have no claim to the area in which
Occidental wishes to drill. The land lies outside reservation boundaries
as defined by the central government, but inside territory utilized by
the U'was as they migrate. A Colombian administrative law judge
dismissed the U'was' claim to the land in 1997 under a legal doctrine
that sanctions the government's claim to all mineral rights within its
borders.

Exploration rights to the U'was territory are held by Oxy, which
includes Shell Oil as an equal partner. In 1998, however, Shell
announced its intention to sell its 37.5 per cent share in the Samore
area. Shell also is selling its interests in another Colombian field, the
Cano Limon Project, which was bombed 65 times in 1997, costing the
company $85.6 million in lost revenues and spilling more that 200,000
barrels of oil.

Colombian oil developments are an increasingly popular target of
guerrillas, which increases risk to the environment. At the Cano Limon
pump station operated nearby in Colombia by Oxy and Shell, roughly
1.5 million barrels of crude oil have been spilled into the rainforest in
the last decade (the Exxon Valdez disaster involved only 36,000 barrels).
Much of this was due to sabotage by guerrillas, who represent another
major threat to the U'was. In response, Oxy and Shell pay a war tax of
$1 per barrel (about $180,000 a day) to the Colombian military in return
for military protection of its installations at Cano Limon. The Colombian
military is known for its human rights abuses, and militarizing the
U'was' territory will introduce organized violence into the area.

One U'wa woman told The Guardian of London, (Sept. 20, 1997) "I sing
the traditional songs to my children. I teach them that everything is
sacred and linked. How can I tell Shell and Oxy that to take petrol is
for us worse than killing your own mother? If you kill the earth, then
no one will live. I do not want to die. Nobody does."

The U'was have taken their case to the Organization of American States
with a petition to the Inter American Human Rights Commission. On
October 7, Martin Wagner of the Earth Justice Legal Defense Fund
represented the U'was at the OAS in Washington, D.C., saying:
"Whether it's by the pollution of the land they consider sacred, the
increased violence this project will inevitably bring, or by their own
hand, oil development means the death of the U'was."

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Related Web Sites:

PROJECT underGROUND
"Drillbits & Tailings: October 7, 1997: Page Three"
URL: http://www.moles.org/ProjectUnderground/drillbits/971007/97100703.html

U'wa Defense Project
URL: http://www.solcommunications.com/uwa.html

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Native Americas Journal
Akwe:kon Press
Cornell University
300 Caldwell Hall
Ithaca, New York 14853

Telephone: (607) 255-4308
FAX: (607) 255-0185
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
URL: http://nativeamericas.aip.cornell.edu


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