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February 08, 2012
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South American Indigenous Protests Highlight Development Tensions

By David Dudenhoefer | 05 Aug 2010
World Politics Review

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LIMA, Peru -- With the entire western Amazon experiencing oil and mining booms, indigenous groups in the Amazon Basin and the Andes -- already fighting encroachment by loggers and small-scale farmers, or else struggling to obtain title for their ancestral land -- have now stepped up their resistance to efforts to exploit oil reserves, mineral deposits and other natural resources in and nearby their communities. In response, the region's presidents have accused native leaders and environmentalists who help them of everything from terrorism to being U.S. lackeys.

The trends cut across ideological divides. Peruvian President Alan Garcia has taken a neoliberal track during the past four years, whereas the president of neighboring Ecuador, Rafael Correa, is a socialist allied with Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez. But both leaders are facilitating the exploitation of natural resources in or near indigenous territories: At least half of the Peruvian Amazon and more than half of the Ecuadorian Amazon are covered by oil concessions, most of them superimposed on indigenous lands. ...

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