Archive for the ‘Stamp It Out’ Category

‘Communist excrement’ – moi?

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

The author of Survival’s ‘most racist article’ of 2009 now says he was ‘exaggerating’ when he suggested bombing Peru’s indigenous population with napalm.

‘When I wrote that I didn’t mean it literally,’ Andres Bedoya Ugarteche retorts in his column in Peru’s Correo newspaper. ‘When you tell someone that he or she’s f**king you, or that you’re going to ‘beat the shit out of them’, you don’t really mean it.’

Indeed. The question is, when isn’t he exaggerating? It’s difficult to know. After all, he describes ‘all human rights NGOs’ as ‘blood-sucking leeches’, and Survival as ‘communist excrement’ and ‘f**king communist swine’ who ‘worship’ the British royal family and want indigenous people to ‘remain in ignorance and misery’ so they ‘can be breastfed by them.’ Other pearls of wisdom: ‘Either we’re all indigenous or no one is’ and ‘When the Egyptians were building their pyramids, there were only llamas in Peru.’

Why should protesting against human rights abuses – in this case, the systematic theft of land, the destruction of eco-systems and livelihoods, and the failure to recognise and respect peoples’ rights to self-determination – make you a communist?

It doesn’t. That’s an old, tired claim that has been trotted out by certain kinds of people ever since fear of the ‘Red Tide’ swept around the globe last century. It wasn’t true then – and isn’t true now.

More importantly, racist descriptions of indigenous people in the media, whether ‘exaggerated’ or not, make it easier for governments and companies to justify taking their land and ‘developing’ them without their understanding and consent – in ways often catastrophic to them. This has happened all over the world: it has led to poverty, disease, shorter life-spans, and the destruction of entire cultures and ways of life.

That’s why Survival’s ‘Stamp it Out’ campaign was launched. That’s why there’s an annual award. And that’s why Bedoya Ugarteche’s article is this year’s worthy winner.

The gist of his article, published in the aftermath of the protests and violence at Bagua earlier this year, is:

‘Peru’s indigenous peoples belong in the past!’

‘They’re stupid and can’t think for themselves!’

‘They have savage customs and ridiculous names and clothes!’

Most of this is music to a government’s ears – especially one like Peru’s that is hell-bent on exploiting as much indigenous land as possible.

In fact, the similarities between Bedoya Ugarteche’s caricature and the government’s, particularly President Garcia’s, is uncanny.

He says the protesters are ‘primitive’, ‘from the pre-agricultural age’ and ‘palaeolithic’. Garcia says they want to take Peru ‘back to a primitive age’.

He says they’re ‘savage’. Ditto Garcia.

He says they were fooled into protesting by a ‘pseudo-native’. Ditto Garcia.

He says they were fooled into protesting by ‘communists’, opposition politicians, and foreign interests. Ditto Garcia.

He says they’re ‘policemen-murdering wretches’. Garcia accuses them of ‘police genocide’.

Even animals come into it. Bedoya Ugarteche brands indigenous leader Alberto Pizango a rat. Garcia has likened them to dogs.

Bedoya Ugarteche even takes exception to the fact that some of the protesters were wearing ‘Lacoste shirts’ – a detail also, rather oddly, noted by Peru’s Embassy in Italy. ‘Some demonstrators took to the streets wearing Lacoste shirts,’ Mr Felix Denegri Boza told Italian media, as if that had anything to do with why they were protesting or the government’s response to it.

Might we suggest that Bedoya Ugarteche, Peru’s diplomatic corps and President García worry less about what shirts the protesters were wearing, and rather more about what they were protesting about?

Reactions to our ‘Most Racist Article of the Year’ award

Thursday, March 20th, 2008

Time for a quick roundup of responses to Survival’s ‘Most Racist Article of the Year’ award. This year’s worthy recipient was Paraguay’s newspaper La Nacion for an editorial which compared Paraguayan Indians to a ‘dangerous cancer’ and described them as ‘filthy’.

The award triggered a firestorm of commentary at Ultima Hora, Paraguay’s largest daily newspaper website, currently running to six pages of heated discussion (in Spanish, of course).

The Independent’s Pandora noted the occasion

Champagne flows and the awards season continues apace. Yesterday brought the Most Racist Article of the Year presentation. … Step forward (drum roll)… the Paraguayan paper La Nacion! I’d like to thank my parents, my editor…

… the award got an honourable mention at Racism Review, while over at IndyBlogs Jerome Bell cried foul:

Clearly the awards is a bit of a cheeky PR stunt by Survival but what the heck.

Cheeky PR stunts? Us?

Jerome wondered how the arrival of the award certificate would be received at La Nacion:

For their journalistic excellence the editors of La Nacion will be sent a certificate inscribed with a quotation from a Native American author who died in 1939. The inscription reads: “All the years of calling the Indian a savage has never made him one.”

I wish I could be a fly on the wall when the editor of La Nacion opens up that parcel.

Indeed.

And for your viewing pleasure, here’s the certificate that La Nacion will shortly be receiving:

Certificate thumbnail

Our news item is up on Digg and needs a bit of help, so please vote away.

Am I not a real human being if I don’t pay taxes?

Wednesday, November 14th, 2007

One or two people have asked me, since the launch of Survival’s Stamp it Out campaign last year, how necessary it is.

‘Do some people still really think tribal peoples are primitive?’ I was asked. ‘Or stuck in the Stone Age?’

Tragically, the answers to both these questions are the same: one emphatic ‘Yes!’ followed by another.

If you don’t believe me, just look at the article on our Stamp it Out page published in La Nacion, a Paraguayan newspaper.

There a group of Paraguayan Indians are described as being ‘Neolithic’ (three times), possessing a ‘backward, withered culture’, maintaining an ‘out-of-date way of living’ and having ‘filthy habits’. Their humanity is questioned and their presence in Paraguay’s city, Asuncion, is compared to a ‘dangerous cancer.’

What does this tell us? That there are people, some of them in positions of authority and influence, who do still harbour racist opinions about tribal people. That these people think their way of living – in cities, paying taxes, for example – is somehow ’superior.’ That Stamp it Out is needed more than ever.

Please do join our campaign and send a postcard. Sending one can rarely have meant so much.