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Are initiated protest actions against imminent expulsion of Paul McAuley |
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Monday, 05 July 2010 22:11 |
Radio La Voz de la Selva | 05/07/2010 | Dozens of people gathered this morning at the front of the Superior Court of Justice of Loreto, expressing their support for British-born religious, Paul McAuley, a the Peruvian government, who canceled his residence in the country, accusing him of stirring and threatening democracy.  The demonstrators are currently in the square near July 28 by carrying signs which show its commitment to Paul Mc Auley, recognized activist and president of the Environmental Network Loretana, an institution that in recent years has questioned the inaction of the state Peru to punish oil companies that pollute rivers and forests of the Amazon. It was reported that at ten o'clock this morning, the religious will attend the State Security Division of the National Police, accompanied by his lawyers to request a police report in which he incriminated for his alleged involvement in acts that put in national security risk. During the protest issued a memorandum signed by leaders of various indigenous peoples can be seen by President Alan Garcia, President of the Council of Ministers and the British Embassy and the media, that the expulsion of Paul McAuley would be an outrage against "a character who fully identifies with the reality of the Loreto region and the problems of indigenous peoples and environment of our Amazon," the report said. Another action of solidarity has been the establishment of a Committee to Combat Exclusion of Paul McAuley in Iquitos who performed on Friday July 2nd vigil in the Plaza de Armas of Iquitos. On Wednesday July 7 will be a citizen mobilization of solidarity that will leave from the Plaza July 28 at 3.30pm.
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The Peruvian government moves closer to the fascist control of the population with the explusion of Father PAUL McAULEY. |
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Monday, 05 July 2010 16:19 |
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Miembros del Congreso:
What has been Father McAuley's crime which has justified the action of the Immigration Office to cancel his resident card to expell him from Peru ?
Father McAULEY has been an outspoken crusader for the human rights of the Amazonian people. I have known him personally on two opportunties at meetings of the Episcopal Social Action Commission http://www.ceas.org.pe/ .
The crime of Father McAuley is PRACTICING FREE SPEECH and demanding Environmental Protection for the Amazonian people's habitat, which includes the Prior Consultation with the people before any private oil company or government dam project is implemented ( respecting the International Labor Organization =ILO 169 Agreement, signed by Peru with Congressional approval in 1993). President Garcia has been actively campaiging against the OIT 169 Agreement, recently rejecting the law passed by 70 percent of the Congress which specified the Regulations for implementing 169. http://www.ww4report.com/node/8785 .
As you should know, on June 5, 2009 (last year) a major massacre took place in Bagua, Peru with the killing of some 31 people, including 9 police officers http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009_Peruvian_political_crisis . This POLITICAL CRISIS was a direct result of the lack of consulation with indigenous peoples with regard to extractive industrial projects and the imposition of these projects by the Peruvian government, in violation of fundamental democratic rights. People like Father Mc Auley most likely saved hundreds of people from a more extensive blood bath.
Moreover these actions by the Peruvian government are a clear VIOLATION of two parts of the Free Trade Agreement (TLC=Tratdo de Libre Comercio in Spanish) signed between Peru and the U.S.:
1- protection of the environment.
2- right for the people to organize in labor unions or other assocations to protect their human rights.
I am requesting that you members of Congress request the U.S. Ambassador to send a diplomatic note to the Peruvian government stating that their action against Father McAuley violates the clauses of the FTA cited above. This Diplomatic Note should request that the "explusion order" against Father McAuley be rescinded. This email is being copied to the USAID Director who meets regularly with the Ambassador. It is also copied to the USAID Democracy and Environmental Officers.
This mail will be circulated to over 50,000 people to inform them and to have them observe the actions of the U.S. government, the Ambassador, and Congress with regard to these huamn rights issues.
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HOW THE GUARDIAN NEWSPAPER HAS REPORTED THE NEWS OF BROTHER PAUL'S SITUATION |
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Saturday, 03 July 2010 18:27 |
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Peru to expel British 'Tarzan agitator' Paul McAuley
Last year, Rory Carroll travelled to the Peruvian Amazon to meet Paul McAuley and learn about his campaign Link to this video Peru has ordered the expulsion of a British missionary who was dubbed a "Tarzan agitator" for helping Amazon tribes to resist the incursion of oil, gas and mining companies into the rainforest. The government has told Brother Paul McAuley, who runs an civil association in the jungle town of Iquitos and promotes indigenous rights, to leave Peru within seven days and never return. The interior ministry revoked his residency permit on the grounds he has participated in political activities "such as protest marches and other acts against the Peruvian state which constitute a breach of public order". The expulsion would mark an abrupt end to the campaigning of a Briton revered by indigenous groups and reviled by the authorities and sections of Peru's media, which in addition to "Tarzan" has branded him a "white terrorist" and "incendiary gringo priest". McAuley said he would fight the expulsion. "I am heading to my office now to see if it's possible to appeal. I'm not sure what's going to happen," he told the Guardian today. "I received the order yesterday so I've got six days left." One tribe offered to hide him in its forest village and a Peruvian woman offered to marry him so he could get a visa. "The support has been extraordinary but I'm going to fight this legally. I'm not going to stay if I'm not allowed," said McAuley. The 62-year-old, a lay member of the Catholic De La Salle teaching order, is a high-profile opponent of government efforts to parcel up three-quarters of Peru's rainforest for oil, gas and ethanol. Peru is home to 70m hectares of Amazon, second only to Brazil. Deals worth billions of dollars have brought in helicopters, barges and pipelines and raised expectations of being a net oil exporter. "Peru's government are clearly determined to brook no opposition to their plans to carve up the Amazon. The government has already initiated a campaign of persecution against indigenous leaders. Now it appears to be going after their allies," said David Hill of the advocacy group Survival International.The interior ministry did not immediately respond to request for comment. The Portsmouth-born McAuley has travelled the Amazon helping indigenous activists to protest the incursions and set up a civil association, Red Ambiental Loretana, in the humid rivertown of Iquitos in Loreto, a northern region bordering Ecuador. He travels on a scooter and by boat. The missionary was awarded an MBE for setting up a school in Peru's capital, Lima. Had he not already given it away some years ago he said he would have sent it back to the Queen to protest British companies' involvement in the Amazon. He has embraced elements of Amazonian spiritual belief based on the concept of energy. Clashes between police and activists in Bagua last year, which McAuley was not involved in, cost dozens of lives and rocked President Alan Garcia's government. Environmental and indigenous groups expressed outrage at the expulsion order and some promised vigorous protests. "The reaction has been tremendous, everybody across the region is full of indignation," said McAuley. Julia Urrunaga, a policy adviser to the Environmental Investigation Agency, said an indigenous champion was being persecuted for challening big corporations. "I feel totally ashamed as a Peruvian and extremely sad to lose someone who has so positively affected the lives of people here." The advocacy group Amazon Watch said McAuley had been under investigation for years but had refused to be intimidated. "The probable impact of the expulsion - certainly intended by the Peruvian state - is to create a chilling effect on international support of ongoing local indigenous struggles for their rights." *********** Legal Disclaimer and Other Information*********** The information contained in this e-mail message is intended only for the use of the individual named above. If the reader of this e-mail message is not the intended recipient, or the employee or agent responsible to deliver it to the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any dissemination, distribution, or copying of this message is strictly prohibited. If you have received this message in error, please immediately notify us by telephone at 020.7470.7400, and destroy the original message. Moore Europe Capital Management, LLP - One Curzon Street, London, W1J 5HA, UK Registered as a limited liability partnership in England and Wales No: OC322533 with its registered office at One Silk Street, London, EC2Y 8HQ Authorised and regulated by the Financial Services Authority
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/jul/02/peru-evicts-british-missionary-paul-mcauley
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Estudiantes indígenas respaldan a hermano Paul Mc Auley |
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Saturday, 03 July 2010 17:41 |
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There are no translations available.
-Saldrían en marcha de protesta para rechazar acusación
-Jóvenes integrantes de la Red Ambiental pedirán revisión de resolución que sentencia partida
Mortificados, pero a la vez sorprendidos, se mostraron los integrantes de la organización de estudiantes indígenas de la amazonía peruana OEPIAP, ante la decisión que optó el Estado, a través del Ministerio del Interior, cancelando la residencia al hermano Paul Mc Auley, a quién le acusan de haber realizado actos contra el orden público interior.
Ricardo Vásquez, integrante de esta organización, señaló que ellos rechazan esta medida, pues consideran que es injusto, “Estamos bastante apenados porque con esto queda demostrado como el Estado peruano, a través de sus gobernantes, censura y trata de acallar a aquellas personas que sí luchan por los derechos de cada ciudadano, especialmente por aquellos hermanos indígenas que sufren tantos abusos”.

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Migraciones cancela residencia a sacerdote ambientalista británico |
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Saturday, 03 July 2010 17:29 |
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There are no translations available. Argumento. Interior lo acusa de participar en actos contrarios a la defensa nacional. “Estamos tocando grandes intereses en el manejo de los recursos naturales y eso incomoda a ciertas personas”, afirmó John Mc Auley.
Elízabeth Prado y Rosa Cárdenas.

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