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Spotlight on Environmental Catastrophe effecting indigenous people   Message List  
Reply Message #45400 of 49934 |
http://www.nativetimes.com/index.asp?action=displayarticle&article_id=8801

Spotlight on Environmental Catastrophe effecting indigenous people in
Ecuador Illuminated by Celebrity Visit

Shelley Bluejay Pierce, bluejay@... 6/11/2007

QUITO, Ecuador- Far from the bright lights of Hollywood, Daryl Hannah and
Q'orianka Kilcher are drawing international attention to the environmental
damages and ongoing catastrophe effecting indigenous people living in
Ecuador. The two actresses and human rights activists are touring remote
rainforest communities ravaged by cancers and other diseases where
environmental damage has wreaked havoc on human lives. Petroleum giant,
Texaco, now owned by Chevron, had drilling operations in the region and is
alleged to have left behind an environmental catastrophe.

On June 6, 2007, both Daryl.Hannah and Q’Orianka Kilcher attended the
opening for the art exhibit, “Crude Reflections,” at Quito's prestigious
Guayasamin Museum. The photos, by award-winning Bay Area photographers Lou
Dematteis and Kayana Szymczak, have previously appeared in large venues
across the USA, but this is the first time they have been on display in
Ecuador. Dramatic photos and storylines combine in this exhibit to reveal
the enormous toll that toxic waste has laid upon the communities in remote
areas within the rainforest.

This exhibit and the visitation by Hannah and Kilcher comes at a time when
a historic $6 billion lawsuit against Chevron nears its final phase.
Mounting evidence may reveal that the oil giant is liable for environmental
contamination in the rainforest. Scientific reports reveal some water
samples contain toxic chemical levels thousands of times higher than
permitted by Ecuadorian and U.S. environmental laws. This lawsuit alleges
that toxic waste dumped by Texaco into rainforest rivers, wetlands and
unlined pits the company dug near their wells, polluted the water supplies
of inhabitants.

The list of plaintiffs, nearly 30,000 in number, includes five indigenous
groups--the Quechua, Siona, Cofan, Secoya and Huaorani. Approximately 80
communities allege that Texaco dumped more than 18 billion gallons of toxic
wastewater into Ecuador’s rainforest during its operations. Waste
by-products from petroleum operations often contain identified cancer
causing agents that can lead to skin disease, reproductive abnormalities,
nerve damage and many forms of cancer. The waste contains such known
carcinogens such as benzene, toluene and xylene.

Cancer rates are the highest in the region where Texaco operated its
drilling operations and the toxic waste is being blamed for hundreds of
lives lost and contributing to the extinction of one indigenous group and
the endangerment of two others.

“The results of the court case may provide environmental clean-up for the
regions’ inhabitants in the future. However, the $6 billion does not
include costs for providing potable water to the residents nor does it
cover necessary health care expenses that the people need immediately. The
final decision rests with the courts and in the meantime, the Ecuadorian
government is attempting to pull resources together for the people there,”
commented Simeon Tegel, with Amazon Watch. (http://www.amazonwatch.org/)

Between 1971 and 1992, more than 1.5 billion barrels of oil was extracted
from this area. The plaintiffs in this case blame Texaco for the disposal
of highly toxic wastes in a manner that they contend is responsible for the
area’s high rate of cancer, birth defects, skin conditions and death.
Texaco’s waste dumping sites are spread across this remote area in Ecuador
consuming an area equivalent in size to Rhode Island.

“I was truly and deeply inspired by these indigenous communities. Even with
the enormous obstacles before them, they put personal differences aside and
came to the aid of their fellows. Though separated by great distances in
some cases, they are a unified, proactive group battling to protect their
homelands and care for each other,” explained Amy O’Meara, spokesperson for
Amnesty International, who visited the area in Ecuador in 2006.
(http://www.amnesty.org/)

Pressure on Chevron over this $6 billion lawsuit increased significantly
this past month when trustees from the three largest public pension funds
in the United States called on the company to take action to resolve the
dispute. These claims prompted the Security Exchange Commission to open an
investigation on whether Chevron management deliberately misled their
stockholders by not disclosing its Ecuador liability to them.

Chevron is also reported to owe between $25 and $50 million dollars in
fines as part of a settlement with the U.S. Justice Department for its
involvement with the “oil-for-food” scandal. During the time that the
Ecuadorian people and their legal representatives were attempting to gain
international attention to their desperate situation, the now Secretary of
State, Condoleezza Rice, was on the Board of Directors for Chevron Oil.
Secretary Rice headed Chevron's committee on public policy until she
resigned to serve within the Bush administration in 2001. Chevron claims in
a recently issued press statement, that the toxic contamination poses no
risk to human health. (more information on Chevron available at
www.chevron.com)

The court trial is expected to reach a final conclusion in early 2008 but
the appeals process could take an additional three years.

“Amnesty International is monitoring Chevron’s performance in both Ecuador
and Nigeria. Our work is ongoing to keep these issues before the public.
Our primary role is advocacy and as long as Chevron is attempting to draw
out this lawsuit, we will continue drawing attention to the suffering of
the residents living in Ecuador. That suffering is continuing daily and is
being exacerbated by using distraction and delays in an attempt to lessen
the responsibilities that Chevron has in this case,” stated Amy O’Meara,
Amnesty International.

Both Daryl Hannah and Q’Orianka Kilcher are due back in the U.S. next week
following this visit to the rainforest communities and the premier of the
exhibit, “Crude Reflections” that documents the plight of the indigenous
people suffering in Ecuador.



Thu Jun 14, 2007 12:45 pm

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http://www.nativetimes.com/index.asp?action=displayarticle&article_id=8801 Spotlight on Environmental Catastrophe effecting indigenous people in Ecuador...
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Jun 14, 2007
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