Wednesday, February 6, 2008

CHILE: MAPUCHE HUNGER STRIKE OVER, VIOLENCE CONTINUES

http://www.tcgnews.com/santiagotimes/index.php?nav=story&story_id=15729&topic_id=1

Pro-Mapuche activist Patricia Troncoso was transferred at 1 a.m. Monday
morning from a Chill·n clinic to Region IX’s Temuco Hospital. The
activist ended her 112-day hunger strike last week after the Chilean
government agreed to meet her demands. Doctors say Troncoso is
recuperating well from the harsh effects of her prolonged fast. Troncoso
reached an agreement with President Michelle Bachelet last Wednesday
after some deliberation. The benefits granted Troncoso include weekend
leave for her and two fellow Mapuche activists, as well as the right to
continue her sentence in the semi-open Angol Work Center (ST, Jan. 30).

Despite Troncoso’s good spirits about her recovery, however, her mood
altered last Thursday upon learning that Walter RamÌrez, the police
officer who shot Mapuche activist MatÌas Catrileo in early January (ST,
Jan. 4), has been released from the Special Forces Prison in Angol.

“The Mapuche will never enjoy due process of law because the State has
pre-emptively judged the Mapuche cause,” she said in a communique from
the hospital. “MatÌas Catrileo was assassinated...this case must be
judged in a civilian tribunal.”

Catrileo’s mother, MÛnica Quezada, reacted somewhat differently,
insisting that RamÌrez’ release was not a reversal of justice because
the Carabinero still awaits trial.

Meanwhile, violence continues to ravage Region IX, where people of
direct Mapuche descent make up roughly 25 percent of the population. Two
attacks on trucks occurred last week near Temuco, the regional capital.
The first truck was stopped Friday by seven hooded people shooting
firearms and attempting to blockade the road into Vilc·n. The second
incident occurred just minutes later when a different group of about 20
people forced a driver to get out of his truck on the road to Temuco and
proceeded to set the truck on fire with Molotov cocktails.

Interior Undersecretary Felipe Harboe said there is no proof that links
last week’s attacks to Mapuche groups. “I think it’s not fair to
stigmatize the Mapuche community. It was a violent minority who
committed these acts,” he said.

Archbishop Ricardo Ezzatti has also spoken out about the stigmatization
of the Mapuche. “From the experiences I have had, and this is what I
believe, the Mapuche are a peaceful people,” he said. “I deeply believe
from my experience that (this violence) corresponds to a minority that
doesn't represent Mapuche interests.”

Though government officials hope that last week’s appointment of Rodrigo
EgaÒa as the new presidential commissioner for indigenous issues will
begin a new era of smoother relations between indigenous communities and
the Chilean State, EgaÒa’s role has been heavily critiqued.

JosÈ Santos Millao, an advisor under the National Corporation for
Indigenous Development (CONADI), denounced the creation of EgaÒa’s new
post as an insufficient provision by the government. He called for more
proactive measures in favor of the Mapuche population, including
constitutional recognition and government representation.

In the past several months Mapuche groups have pushed hard for some type
of political autonomy. Last November, the first-ever Mapuche political
party, Wallmapuwen (“Tierra Mapuche”), was formed. The creation of the
new party was strongly influenced and catalyzed by Spanish separatist
groups Batasuna, from Basque Country, and the Galician Nationalist Block
(BNG).

BNG member Bieito Lobeira, a prominent supporter of Mapuche autonomy,
said, “We are not necessarily speaking of independence but of a unique
political structure that would permit the Mapuche community to makes its
own decisions or co-decisions within the states of Argentina and Chile.”

(Ed. Note: See related feature story below – a La Tercera editorial
chastising Bachelet for negotiating with hunger striker Troncoso.)


SOURCES: EL MERCURIO, LA TERCERA, LA NACION
By Alex Cacciari



Mapuche International Solidarity Network
mapucheinternationalsolidarity@gmail.com

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

mapuche indians are the worst, Catrileo and 'patricia troncoso' are fine examples of losers whose entire life is not an example for anybody. Stop lying about the 'war' becausa I feel proud of being a CHILEAN, not 'mapuchi'
Stop behaving as monkeys!