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For Peru's Indians, Lawsuit Against Big Oil Reflects a New Era

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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-31-08 07:04 PM
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For Peru's Indians, Lawsuit Against Big Oil Reflects a New Era
For Peru's Indians, Lawsuit Against Big Oil Reflects a New Era
Outsiders and High-Tech Tools Help Document Firms' Impact

By Kelly Hearn
Special to The Washington Post
Thursday, January 31, 2008; Page A14

NUEVO JERUSALEM, Peru -- Tomás Maynas Carijano strolled through his tiny jungle farm, pinching leaves, shaking his head. The rain forest spread lushly in all directions -- covering what oil maps call Block 1AB.

"Like the trunk of that papaya, the cassava and bananas are also dying," said the spiritual leader of this remote Achuar Indian settlement in Peru's northern Amazon region. "Before Oxy came, the fruits and the plants grew well."

Oxy is Occidental Petroleum, the California-based company that pulled a fortune from this rain forest from 1972 to 2000. It is also the company that Maynas and other Achuar leaders now blame for wreaking environmental havoc -- and leaving many of the people here ill. Last spring, U.S. lawyers representing Maynas and 24 other indigenous Peruvians sued Occidental in a Los Angeles court, alleging that, among other offenses, the firm violated industry standards and Peruvian law by dumping toxic wastewater directly into rivers and streams.

The company denies liability in the case.

For indigenous groups, the Occidental lawsuit is emblematic of a new era. The Amazon region was once even more isolated than it is today, its people largely cut off from environmental defenders in Washington and other world capitals who might have protected their interests. Now, Indians have gained access to tools that level the playing field -- from multinational lawsuits to mapping technologies such as Google Earth.

Oil companies that once traded money and development for Indians' blessings are increasingly finding outsiders getting involved. "History has shown that oil companies will cut corners if someone isn't watching," said Gregor MacLennan of Shinai, an internationally funded civic group in Peru. "We try to get to local communities first to help them make informed decisions about oil companies and the changes they bring."

More:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/01/30/AR2008013003744.html?wpisrc=rss_world
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