Archive for June, 2010

‘Birdwatchers’ up for award

Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010

The movie ‘Birdwatchers’, which tells the story of the Guarani-Kaiowá Indians in Brazil, has been shortlisted for a prestigious One World Media Award.

The film depicts a 'retomada' where tribe members re-occupy land which has been taken from them.
The film depicts a ‘retomada’ where tribe members re-occupy land which has been taken from them. © Marie Hippenmeyer

Birdwatchers highlights the shocking plight of the Guarani, through a love story between a young Guarani shaman apprentice and the daughter of a wealthy landowner.

Exiled from their land and struggling to survive, the Guarani community in Birdwatchers – like many real life Guarani – resolve to take back their land from the rancher who occupies it. And like so many real Guarani ‘retomadas’ (retakings), their attempt is met with violent repression.

A 'retomada' sequence in the film.
A ‘retomada’ sequence. © Marie Hippenmeyer

The film stars Guarani Indians who had never acted before, and who worked together with director Marco Bechis to devise the script. Their moving performances are testimony to the Guarani’s refusal to give up hope.

Guarani pose for tourists in the film.
Guarani pose for tourists in the movie’s opening sequence. © Marie Hippenmeyer

The winners of the One World Media Awards are due to be announced on 22 June.

Birdwatchers is available on DVD. Watch the trailer.

Update: Birdwatchers won the award! “The jury was unanimous in voting as the winner this engrossing and beautifully made film.

Bagua: One year on

Saturday, June 5th, 2010

Exactly one year ago today, at six a.m., an indigenous leader called Alberto Pizango was walking to his office in Peru’s capital city, Lima, when his mobile phone rang.

A voice said: ‘Brother, they’re killing us. The government has started the massacre. Listen.’ Alberto listened.


Police attack protesters at Bagua. © Independent journalist courtesy of Amazon Watch

Hundreds of miles away, in the Amazon, near a town called Bagua, police had opened fire on Awajún and Wampis Indians protesting against new laws opening up their land to oil, gas, logging and mining companies.

‘Baguazo’, as this tragic event became known, made international headlines and sparked protests against Peru’s government around the world: 33 people were killed, more than 20 of them policemen, and 200 injured.

The government’s response? A mixed bag including suspending two of the laws, appointing a commission to investigate the killings, and instigating a campaign against Peru’s indigenous leaders that forced Alberto, among others, to seek asylum in Nicaragua.

When the commission published its report, in December, two members refused to sign it and announced, on Christmas Day, that they would write their own instead.

That report, released on 15 April, said exactly what Peru’s government didn’t want to hear: that the police operation at Bagua was ‘badly planned’ and ‘could only lead to disaster’, and that the laws the Awajún and Wampis were protesting against were ‘highly contradictory’ to indigenous rights.


An eyewitness account of the violence that erupted after the Peruvian government decided to break up an indigenous roadblock by force.

Has Peru’s government, one year on, learnt its lesson? Hardly. Two weeks ago, in London, I listened to a delegation from state oil firm Perupetro declare that 10.9 million hectares of Peru are up for auction this year to oil and gas companies.

Almost all of this area is indigenous land in the Amazon, and is in addition to millions more hectares that Perupetro has already opened up to companies.


Police detain a protester. © Thomas Quirynen

Alberto’s organization, AIDESEP, called the auction a ‘new provocation’ and ‘new threat.’

Equally concerning, Peru still allows oil and gas companies into areas inhabited by ‘uncontacted’ tribes.

Perenco, Repsol-YPF and ConocoPhillips are all working in a region in northern Peru where there are at least two such tribes.

If contact is made, the consequences could be catastrophic: disease, deaths and epidemics.

And Alberto? He returned to Peru last week, but was arrested immediately at Lima’s airport before being released on bail.

The charges against him are part of what AIDESEP calls a ‘destabilization campaign’ aimed at destroying Peru’s indigenous movement, and which has included forcing other leaders into asylum and a legal move to close down AIDESEP.

We urge Peru’s government to drop all charges against Alberto, to recognize indigenous peoples’ rights to land and self-determination, and to do all it can to make sure that nothing like ‘Baguazo’ ever, ever happens again.