Panama: Ngöbe-Buglé Murdered After Anti-dam Protest 2nd April

Onési­mo Rodríguez, a leader in Panama’s Ngöbe-Buglé indige­nous group, was killed by a group of masked men in Cer­ro Pun­ta, in west­ern Chiriquí depart­ment, the evening of March 22 fol­low­ing a protest against con­struc­tion of the Bar­ro Blan­co hydro­elec­tric dam. Car­los Miran­da, anoth­er pro­test­er who was attacked along with Rodríguez, said the assailants beat both men with met­al bars. Miran­da lost con­scious­ness but sur­vived; Rodríguez’s body was found in a stream the next day. Miran­da said he was unable to iden­ti­fy the attack­ers because it was dark and their faces were cov­ered. Manolo Miran­da and oth­er lead­ers of the April 10 Move­ment, which orga­nizes protests against the dam, charged that “the ones that mis­treat­ed the Ngöbes were dis­guised police agents.”

The Ngöbe-Buglé stepped up their demon­stra­tions against the Bar­ro Blan­co project in Jan­u­ary, when con­struc­tion con­tin­ued at the site despite a Unit­ed Nations (UN) report that large­ly sub­stan­ti­at­ed indige­nous claims that the dam would flood three vil­lages, cut the res­i­dents off from food sources and destroy impor­tant cul­tur­al mon­u­ments. As of March 26 an inde­pen­dent study man­dat­ed by the UN report and agreed to by the gov­ern­ment had still not start­ed.

 

In addi­tion to protest­ing the Hon­duran-owned com­pa­ny build­ing the dam, Gen­er­ado­ra del Ist­mo, S.A. (GENISA), indige­nous activists blame two Euro­pean banks for fund­ing the project: Germany’s pri­vate Deutsche Investi­tions- und

Entwick­lungs­ge­sellschaft (DEG) and the Ned­er­landse Financier­ings-Maatschap­pij voor Ontwik­kel­ings­lan­den N.V. (FMO), in which the Dutch gov­ern­ment holds a con­trol­ling inter­est. Dam oppo­nents say GENISA also sought fund­ing from the Euro­pean Invest­ment Bank (EIB) but with­drew the appli­ca­tion after learn­ing that bank offi­cials planned to vis­it the affect­ed com­mu­ni­ties them­selves. (Mongabay.com, March 25; La Estrel­la, Pana­ma, March 26)

In oth­er news, as of March 19 the Nation­al Coor­di­nat­ing Com­mit­tee of the Indige­nous Peo­ples of Pana­ma (COONAPIP) had decid­ed to with­draw from the Unit­ed Nations Reduc­ing Emis­sions from Defor­esta­tion and Degra­da­tion (UN-REDD+) pro­gram, which focus­es on envi­ron­men­tal prob­lems in devel­op­ing nations. The indige­nous group charged in a state­ment that the UN and the Pana­man­ian gov­ern­ment “have appeared to mar­gin­al­ize the col­lec­tive par­tic­i­pa­tion of the sev­en indige­nous peo­ples and 12 tra­di­tion­al struc­tures that make up COONAPIP” and have put “legal and admin­is­tra­tive obsta­cles in the way” of indige­nous par­tic­i­pa­tion. The Mesoamer­i­can Alliance of Peo­ple and Forests (AMPB), a coali­tion of Cen­tral Amer­i­can and Mex­i­can indige­nous and envi­ron­men­tal groups, is back­ing COONAPIP’s deci­sion. (Mongabay.com, March 19; Adi­tal, Brazil, March 21)