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PERU´S ´INCENDIARY GRINGO PRIEST´ Print E-mail
Friday, 23 July 2010 14:50

Brother Paul McAuley is a hero among the indigenous tribes of the Peruvian Amazon, but the 62-year-old missionary from Portsmouth has made such a nuisance of himself in his campaign for tribal rights that Peru’s government has ordered his expulsion, writes Jonathan Rugman.

“If I have to go, I’ll get carried out,” he told me last week. “I won’t resist because I respect Peruvian law, but I won’t have the energy to take any steps to walk. That would be to betray these people.

READ MORE..<< Channel  4 News >>

 

US ORGANIZATIONS SUPPORT BROTHER PAUL


Tnte. Gral. PNP Octavio Salazar Miranda
Ministro del Interior
Ministerio del Interior
Plaza 30 de agosto s/n Urb. Corpac
San Isidro
Peru
Correo electrónico: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
CC: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

July 19, 2010

Dear Minister Salazar,
The undersigned organizations and individuals, mostly based in the United States, write to express our profound concern at the threatened expulsion of Brother Paul Michael John Thomas McAuley. On July 1, 2010 he was given a 7-day expulsion order to leave Peru. We are pleased that a court in Loreto overturned the expulsion order. We call upon you to respect that decision and to take no further action to prevent Brother Paul from continuing his important work.

The work of Brother Paul McAuley is well known in Peru and abroad. His dedication to the defense of the environment and the rights of the indigenous peoples of the Amazon is an example to many. We stand with him in his concern regarding resource extraction practices that damage the environment and threaten the well being of the indigenous peoples of the Peruvian Amazon. We are deeply troubled that his efforts to ensure due process for indigenous peoples, including free, prior and informed consent regarding resource extraction projects, could be construed as a basis for his expulsion from Peru.

Our organizations have a long history in the defense of human rights in the Americas, and many of us are in close communication with the U.S. Administration and Congress on these matters. We view this case with the utmost seriousness. We respectfully request that you take no further action to impede Brother Paul’s continued residence and service in Peru.

Sincerely,

Amazon Watch

Almuth Ernsting
Biofuelwatch
United Kingdom/United States

Brother Dennis Malloy, FSC
Provincial
Brothers of the Christian Schools
District of Eastern North America
Eatontown, NJ

Brother Timothy Coldwell, FSC
Visitor (Provincial, New Orleans-Santa Fe District)
Brothers of the Christian Schools (De La Salle)
Lafayette, Louisiana

Brother Robert Schieler, FSC
General Councilor
United States-Toronto Region
Christian Brothers Conference
Washington, DC

T. Michael McNulty, SJ
Justice and Peace Director
Conference of Major Superiors of Men
Silver Spring, MD

Ecumenical Committee of English Speaking Church Personnel in Nicaragua (CEPRHI)

Philip McManus
Co-Chair
Forging Alliances South and North
Santa Cruz, California

Amanda Martin
Director
Guatemala Human Rights Commission/USA
Washington, D.C.

Anita Seth
Executive Director
IF
Corralitos, California

Daphne Wysham
Fellow
Institute for Policy Studies
Washington, DC

Margaret H. Law
Founding Director
International Media Project

Marianne Salmon Gauss
Assistant Professor
La Salle University
Philadelphia, PA

Latin American /Caribbean Committee of the Loretto Community

John T. Law, President
Law Investment Company

David Kane
Associate for Latin America and Economic Justice
Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns
Washington, DC

Rev. Fr Seamus Finn, OMI
Director- Missionary Oblates Justice, Peace and Integrity of Creation office,
Washington D.C

Rebecca Sommer
NGO Society for Threatened Peoples International
Indigenous Peoples Department

Sisters of Mercy of the Americas – Institute Justice Team
Silver Spring, MD

Soumya Dutta
Bharat Jan Vigyan Jatha
South Asian Dialogues on Ecological Democracy    

John Lindsay-Poland
U.S. Fellowship of Reconciliation Task Force on Latin America and the Caribbean
Oakland, California

Joy Olson
Executive Director
Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA)
Washington, DC

 
The battle for Peru's jungle Print E-mail
Wednesday, 21 July 2010 16:21

 

_48372716_paul_mcauley013

Hundreds of locals have protested over government plans for their region

 

 

Ecuadorian Indigenous arrive in Iquitos to express their rejection Manta-Manaus corridor.

Radio La Voz de la Selva | 21/07/2010 | A delegation of indigenous leaders in the Ecuadorian Amazon to Iquitos arrived today to protest the intent of the governments of Peru and Ecuador to implement the Manta-Manaus multimodal corridor under the IIRSA plan, the same as they affect their communities, especially the negative impact on the environment.
Greffe White, president of the Federation of Quichua Communities in the Ecuadorian Amazon, said the interest of the hundred and twenty Quichua communities in Ecuador is that their voices are heard during the presentation of the Napo River Binational Study within the framework of the proposed port connection Manta-Manaos, the same to be held on Thursday, July 22 in the auditorium of the Institute of Peruvian Amazon Research, based in Iquitos.
"We came out here (Iquitos) to attend the study will be presented tomorrow. In all the meetings we've had in recent weeks the foundations have expressed their opposition to this study because we know what will happen to our communities. The Napo River is not for surfing, sailing will have to dredge the river and it meant the destruction of species in our rivers. They are buying land in our communities to build the port. All this will be a negative social impact for our communities, "he said.
For its part Carlos Masabanda, Pachamama Foundation representative in Ecuador, said his concern is that there are indigenous communities across the Napo River strip them will be affected by a much-scale trade will only serve to transport containers from Brazil to Asia.
The draft Manta-Manaus port connection is a priority for the governments of Peru and Ecuador and plans implemented from 2011. The project involves the development of the Ecuadorian port of deepwater Manta, which was awarded to the company based in Hong Kong's Hutchison Port Holdings (HPH) in a 30-year concession will require an investment of U.S. $ 523 million from the dealership and U.S. $ 55 million from the state.
The terminal will be connected by road to Puerto Francisco de Orellana, in Rio Napo, said Correa. In turn, the river will be dredged and then the port Francisco de Orellana be linked to the Brazilian port of Manaus through a system of locks. The Brazilian port leading to the Atlantic Terminal in Bethlehem, in the same country, which would make the project cheaper and faster route to connect the Atlantic and Asia, according to its promoters.
Since 2008, a group of specialists from France, Bolivia, Brazil, Peru and Ecuador made a tour of the Napo River to Iquitos to study sediment flow, leakage, climate variability, the impact of colonization, volcanic activity, flora and fauna of the basin. The end result of this study will be presented tomorrow in Iquitos which has generated the attention of the authorities.

 
El gobierno peruano acusa a Paul Mc auley de instigar las manifestaciones entre los pueblos indígenas que protestaban contra la destrucción del medio ambiente. Él ha hecho un llamamiento en contra de la solicitud. Print E-mail
Wednesday, 21 July 2010 16:17


http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/10538182

Missionary Defending Amazon Tribes in Peru Must Not Be Deported, Says Amnesty International

Amnesty International has called on the Peruvian government to revoke its decision to expel a British Catholic activist who has spent the past ten years defending the rights of the country's Indigenous people.
Paul McAuley, who helps local communities protest the effects of oil, gas and mining exploitation on their environment, is facing deportation today. The authorities declared they would cancel his residency permit on the morning of July 1.
In June he publicly denounced an oil spill into the waters of Amazonian river Marañon.

http://www.amnestyusa.org/document.php?id=ENGUSA20100707002&lang=e

MAJOR LINKS TO SAVE YOU TIME BELOW:


GUARDIAN


ttp://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/jul/02/peru-evicts-british-missionary-paul-mcauley

 

Apus of the Maranon and Iquitos population protested against Pluspetrol.

"Residents reported lack of support and affirm the continuing pollution

The population Iquitos stood up and walked out to protest to the streets, supporting the call for indigenous leaders of the Maranon Basin, who marched to the headquarters of the oil company Pluspetrol, located on Avenida La Marina.
Hundreds of people joined the protest at the center of the city. This action was motivated by fighting the oil spill occurred last June 19 and affected several communities, including Saramuro and Santa Rita de Castilla in the Loreto region.

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Pollution results show different from the abysmally IIAP Print E-mail
Wednesday, 21 July 2010 15:30
DIGESA results came out on oil spill in the Marañon
- Although it was made the same day and in the same areas of the Marañón River.
- Report Digesa will be considered by the Attorney General for legal action.
- The PCM demands immediate report of final results.
Confusion, surprise, suspicion and disbelief are causing the reports submitted by the Research Institute of the Peruvian Amazon (IIAP) and the General Directorate of Environmental Health (DIGESA), regarding pollution registered on June 19 2010 in the Marañón River, by the spill of 320 barrels of crude oil.
Results were diametrically opposed and there must be a third organization specializing in analysis of samples of river pollution due to oil spills, since many DIGESA mention that at times has tried to minimize the contamination presented in the rivers.
The IIAP under the responsibility of 04 technicians, presented the results of the analysis made to the Marañón river on 22 June. The benchmark assessment area was around Saramuro Station and near Santa Rita de Castilla, three days after the oil spill. Sampling Stations:
1 .- Saramuro. 2 .- 200 m before Saramuro. 3 .- Saramuro 500 m below. 4 .- Santa Rita de Castilla.
He says results show high pollution ...
"The results of the analysis of the Marañón River samples have a high content of oils and fats that exceed by more than one hundred times the National Environmental Quality Standards for Water, established on the DS MINAM 002-2008 Category for water records the IIAP.
Results Ph and oils and fats ...
Sampling points:
-Saramuro .- Coordinates: 508237-9478379, Ph.-7.6-mg / L 110.00.

-200 M before Saramuro: 507838-9471723-PH.-7.7-mg/L113.00.

-500 M below Saramuro: 508301-9479343-Ph.-7.0-mg / L 109.00.

-Santa Rita: PH.-7.7-mg/L108.00.

What is striking here is that Saramuro 200 m before, there was a greater degree of contamination (113.00) than the 500 m below Saramuro (109.00) that is supposed to be receiving the brunt of oil spilled ( ?).

RECOMMENDATIONS IIAP.

Knowing that dispersants have been used for oil spills that have caused its dissolution and precipitation at the bottom of the river, it is necessary to follow a comprehensive monitoring of the impacts that could arise in the short and medium term in the water, sediment, flora and fauna the impacted area.

DIGESA RESULTS ...

As recalled after DIRESA take out samples from various parts of the Marañón River received the spill of more than 300 barrels of oil, they were sent to the laboratories of the Department of Environmental Health for the respective analysis which would enable them make a final assessment.

With regard to released by the Environmental Analysis Laboratory Control of Water physiochemical, the Report of "test" 0535 shows:

-Code: 05055.-3 km. downstream from the confluence with the creek Parinari, right bank of the river: According to the TPH Total Petroleum Hydrocarbons C10 to C32 ... gives a mg / L to 0.02.

-05 056: Facing Shapajilla community, margin-right next to Santa Rita Island: According shows a TPH-mg / L of less than 0.01.

-05 057 500 m upstream of the oil spill, front Saramuro / central part of the river / Urarinas / Loreto. TPH.-mg / L of less than 0.01.

-05 058: Code M-12 Field ... 50 m downstream from the station bombeo. río.-TPH/mg/L right-margin of less than 0.01.

-05 059: Field Code M.12-A: 50 m downstream of the river ... TPH mg / L of less than 0.01.

-05 060 500 m downstream from the pumping station: TPH mg / L of less than 0.01.

-05 061 500 m downstream from the pumping station, right bank of the river ... TPH mg / L 0.01.

So for DIGESA virtually no pollution existed in the Marañón river unless those responsible for leaving Loreto and press conference, reading better explain the results received from the Capital, signed by the Blga. Soledad Osorio Alva, as he is claiming the leader Alfonso López Tejada.

Results abysmal two-presumably serious institutions, deserve a detailed explanation to the citizens, especially those affected by pollution in the Maranon.
 
Peoples and Cocamilla Cocama Foot Fight for the Abandonment of Government and Business PLUSPETROL Print E-mail
Monday, 19 July 2010 21:48

Indigenous peoples knowledge to make national and international public opinion, the abuses which are objects that were our indigenous brothers oil spill in the rivers by the state and oil company, we fully orphans of our authorities and even the sack DIGESA a report on the attempts to delegitimize the IIAP report on the consequences of the spill everything that happened in the meeting on Saturday 17 July.

On Tuesday 20 at 3 pm local employment to march with the Plus Petrol in Iquitos, doing a sit and hold them satisfies our demands.

http://orpio-aidesep.blogspot.com/2010/07/pueblos-cocama-y-cocamilla-en-pie-de.html

 

more news...


Brother Paul McAuley is a hero among the indigenous tribes of the Peruvian Amazon, but the 62-year-old missionary from Portsmouth has made such a nuisance of himself in his campaign for tribal rights that Peru's government has ordered his expulsion, writes Jonathan Rugman.

read full story..

 
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