Dead Forest Defenders
by John Ross
Mexico's 56.000.000 hectares of lush forestland covering a quarter of its national territory and comprising 1.3% of the world's forest resources, are increasingly littered with the corpses of dead forest defenders.
With the highest deforestation rate in Meso-America--272,000 hectares of tropical forest disappear a year--Mexican forests are a violent battleground between narco-gangs clearing land for illicit cultivation, guerilla groups encamped under the canopy, heavily-armed wood poachers who steal 2,000,000 board feet of timber each year, and those who seek to defend the trees.
Mexico City - In recent years, Mexico's forests have become a killing floor
every bit as lethal as Brazil where such environmental martyrs as Chico
Mendez, Sister Dorothy Stang, and young Dionicio Ribieras have been cut
down by the pistoleros of ruthless landowners.
The list of the
dead is horrific. In the state of Mexico, 30 forest inspectors, a third
of the state force, have been murdered since 1991 according to a count
kept by Hector Magallanes, Greenpeace Mexico forest action coordinator.
Federal forest wardens are equally as vulnerable. With 300 inspectors
to cover more than 50,000,000 hectares, each inspector oversees 180,000
hectares. Too often, they find themselves caught up in shoot-outs with
organized gangs of wood poachers ("talamontes") who do their dirty work
mostly in the dark with an army of gunsills standing watch.
When
Wilfredo Alvarez, a Guerrero state forest inspector was ambushed in
2003 near the state capital of Chilpancingo, one of his killers was a
fellow inspector who had been corrupted by the talamontes. Miguel Angel
Maya, regional coordinator for the National Protected Land Commission,
was gunned down in the Chimilapas, one of Mexico's last two great
forests, in 2005--his predecessor had been murdered the previous summer.
Poor
farmers who seek to defend their forests from the wood poachers are met
with homicidal repression. 17 members of the Farmers Organization of
the Southern Sierra (OCSS) were massacred at Aguas Blancas Guerrero in
June 1995 after they blocked a crony of corrupt governor Ruben Figueroa
from logging out their sierra. 28 Zapotec Indians were butchered in
2002 in the southern Oaxaca sierra in a feud over forest ownership.
The
most recent killing to shame national attention was that of 21 year-old
Aldo Zamora in Ocuitlan Mexico state this past May 15th--Aldo's brother
Misael was critically wounded in the attack by wood poachers from the
local Encarnacion clan. Aldo and Misael are the sons of legendary
forest defender Ildefonso Zamora. "They go to where we hurt when they
take our children" Ildefonso, a Tlahuica Indian leader, mourned, vowing
to continue his peoples' struggle to defend their forests. Although
President Felipe Calderon came to Ocuitlan and pledged that Aldo's
killers would not enjoy impunity, arrests have been slow in coming.
When
forest defenders are not murdered outright, they are persecuted and
jailed on absurd charges on orders from the talamontes. This past June
6th, Jaime Gonzalez who campaigns to halt the wholesale devastation of
fragile mountain forests in Motozintla Chiapas was jailed by local
police for a traffic offense and disappeared for 15 days during which
he says he was relentlessly tortured. Gonzalez remains in state prison.
The
Campesino Ecologistas ("Ecological Farmers") of the Petatlan sierra
above Guerrero's Costa Grande organized to combat uncontrolled
clear-cutting by the U.S. timber giant Boise Cascade --Boise moved to
Mexico after having timber permits to log in U.S. national forests
cancelled as the result of environmentalist pressures. A Campesino
Ecologista blockade of mountain roads eventually cut off Boise's access
to its wood supply and the transnational moved its operations to
greener pastures in southern Chile. But caciques (rural bosses) who had
cut lucrative deals with the transnational to sell off the forests grew
disgruntled and at least five villagers were killed by their gunmen.
Rodolfo
Montiel and Teodoro Cabrera who had been prominent organizers of the
blockade were taken prisoner by the 40th Motorized Infantry Brigade and
tortured for days by the soldiers. Later, they were charged with
possession of marijuana and automatic weapons and thrown into the
Guerrero state prison in Iguala where they languished for two years.
Both farmers were designated as prisoners of conscience by Amnesty
International and in 2002, while still in prison; they were awarded the
Goldman Prize, sometimes described as an environmental Nobel. Released
by former president Vicente Fox because of their poor health as the
result of the beatings by the military, Montiel and Cabrera, afraid to
move their families back to the forests of Petatlan, took up residence
at the other end of the country in Yucatan.
They had good reason
to be fearful. Their lawyer Digna Ochoa died mysteriously in Mexico
City in 2001. Fellow ecologist farmer Felipe Arriaga was framed for the
murder of the son of a local cacique and served 10 months in prison in
2004 before justice was done. In 2005, Campesino Ecologista Albertino
Penaloza and two of his children were assassinated in an ambush in the
Sierra of Petatlan.
The persecution of forest defenders is not
confined to southern Mexico. Isidro Baldanegro, a Raramuri Indian
defender of the diminishing pine forests of Chihuahua state's
Tarahumara sierra from "chabochi" (non-Indian) talamontes, and young
Hermenigildo Rivas, were taken into custody on their ejido in 2003
after state police broke into their home without a warrant and charged
them with the usual guns and marijuana violations, the same charges
lodged against the Campesino Ecologistas.
The two were beaten
unmercifully and locked up for 18 months before international
environmental groups intervened. Once again, Amnesty International
declared the forest defenders prisoners of conscience and they too were
awarded the Goldman prize, a prerequisite of which seems to be torture
and imprisonment by the Mexican police.
But those who defend
Mexican forests from predatory wood poaching are not the only defenders
of the environment to be killed or jailed for their efforts. In
December 2003, Navy officer Andres Espino was murdered by turtle egg
poachers while providing protection for endangered Pacific Coast sea
turtles on a Michoacan beach--a second sailor was wounded. The Mexican
Navy has been active in defense of these diminishing species. But when
the Cucapa Indians in the Baja California desert try to fish the Sea of
Cortez for their sacred corvina, they are removed at gunpoint by
sailors assigned to this protected area.
Much of Mexico's
forestland is titularly owned by 500 mostly-Indian ejidos but
indigenous ownership does not guarantee that the forests will be
defended and conserved. While many ejidos zealously protect their
forests which are held in common and represent the communities' most
valued resource, other Indians such as the Lacandon who occupy the
forest of the same name lease out their timber rights to millions of
meters of precious mahogany and cedar stands to corporate talamontes.
On
the other side of the ledger, Zapatista Mayan Indian rebels who share
the rain forest with the Lacandones, enforce timber cutting strictures
in their communities and set up roadblocks at key chokepoints in the
jungle and the surrounding canyons to keep the wood poachers from
moving their loads to clandestine sawmills in the municipality of
Ocosingo. Clashes at the roadblocks have resulted in casualties on both
sides. "The earth is our mother," explained Omar, a Zapatista forest
defender on the Ejido Morelia, at the recent Intergalactica forum in
the Lacandon jungle, "we are prepared to die to defend her."
John Ross can be reached at: johnross@igc.org
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