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Tell congress no more

Target:
We do not agree with US Free Trade, Violations of the Indigenous Peruvians
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This violation of human Indigenous rights and degradation of eco systems
is not my impression of "Greening America". Please read the following news release and tell President Obama to stop the Peruvian President Garcia from such activity and consider revoking the Nafta with Peru.
News release; Bagua, Peru (June 6, 2009)  In the early morning hours on Friday, Peruvian Special Forces staged a violent raid on a group of indigenous people at a peaceful blockade on a road outside of Bagua in a remote area of the northern Peruvian Amazon resulting in 25 civilians confirmed dead and over a hundred wounded.  Over 600 police attacked several thousand unarmed Awajun and Wambis indigenous peoples including many women and children and forcibly dispersed them using tear gas and live ammunition.

Dramatic photos (available on www.amazonwatch.org) of the attack show clearly the police brutally beating and shooting demonstrators at close range.  At 2 am police began to approach the demonstrators as they were sleeping along the Fernando Belaśnde Terry road. Demonstrators refused to move from the roadblock as police in helicopters fired teargas grenades and live ammunition.  Eyewitnesses report that police also attacked from both sides firing live rounds into the crowd as people fled into surrounding steep hillsides, many becoming trapped.  As the unarmed demonstrators were being killed and injured some wrestled with police, fighting back in self-defense, which resulted in the reported deaths of nine police officers.  
 In local radio reports the chief of police claimed that the indigenous demonstrators were armed and fired first.  This claim has been strongly rejected by dozens of local eyewitnesses including local journalists who confirmed that Amazonian demonstrators have been entirely peaceful and only bear traditional spears and in no way provoked any violence.  A point highlighted by the fact that the blockades have been going on for 56 days without a single incident. 
   Gregor MacLennan of Amazon Watch who is currently in Bagua gathering first hand testimonies from blockade participants, local journalists and residents stated:eyewitness testimonies say that Special Forces opened fire on peaceful and unarmed demonstrators including from helicopters, killing and wounding dozens in an orchestrated attempt to open the roads.  It seems that the police had come with orders to shoot.  This was not a clash, but a coordinated police raid with police firing on protesters from both sides of their blockade.
  There have been many accounts of atrocities committed by the Special Forces. Some have reported seeing the police throwing liquid on the cadavers and burning them. Also local residents have given accounts of having seen police throwing bodies of dead civilians into the river in an apparent attempt to underreport the number of dead. We've also received accounts that some of those injured were being detained by security forces and denied medical attention leading to additional deaths.   There are many people still reported missing and access to medical attention in the region is horribly inadequate.
  Perus Ombudsmans office issued a strong statement yesterday demanding an end to the violence. Letters condemning the governments actions are pouring in from thousands of Peruvians and international human rights activists and organizations. Today, Victoria Tauli-Corpuz, the chair of the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues of the United Nations issued a letter expressing shock and deep distress at reports received of atrocities committed and calling on the government to,"Immediately cease all violence against indigenous communities and organizations."
Indigenous peoples have vowed to continue protests until the Peruvian Congress revokes free trade decrees issued by President Garcia under special powers granted by Congress in the context of the Free Trade Agreement with the United States.
  In the past two weeks, the Constitutional Committee of Congress has ruled that legislative decrees 994 and 1090 were unconstitutional. The Peruvian Congress was scheduled to debate the revocation of decree 1090 again on Thursday, however, Garcia's political party, for the third time, prevented the debate preferring instead to attack the peaceful blockades. The government Ombudsman office has filed a legal action with the constitutional tribunal regarding the unconstitutionality of decree 1064, which affects the land rights laws in Peru.
 Garcia has rejected several congressional debates on the decrees, opting for violent attacks and brute force that will only worsen this conflict. It is outrageous that the ministers are now attempting to blame the victims for this incident and cover up the number of indigenous people dead, said Gregor MacLennan.
  The protests have provoked national debate about government policies in the Amazon that ignore indigenous peoples and encourage large-scale extractive industries in Amazonian lands. Indigenous peoples assert that new laws undermine their rights and open up their ancestral lands to private companies for mining, logging, plantations, and oil drilling without their consultation or consent.  
  A coalition of human rights and environmental organizations are urging the Garcia Government to stand down and cease violent confrontations by the military and calling for solidarity demonstrations at Peruvian Embassies around the world.

This violation of human Indigenous rights and degradation of eco systems
is not my impression of "Greening America". Please read the following news release and tell President Obama to stop the Peruvian President Garcia from such activity and consider revoking the Nafta with Peru.
News release; Bagua, Peru (June 6, 2009)  In the early morning hours on Friday, Peruvian Special Forces staged a violent raid on a group of indigenous people at a peaceful blockade on a road outside of Bagua in a remote area of the northern Peruvian Amazon resulting in 25 civilians confirmed dead and over a hundred wounded.  Over 600 police attacked several thousand unarmed Awajun and Wambis indigenous peoples including many women and children and forcibly dispersed them using tear gas and live ammunition.

Dramatic photos (available on www.amazonwatch.org) of the attack show clearly the police brutally beating and shooting demonstrators at close range.  At 2 am police began to approach the demonstrators as they were sleeping along the Fernando Belaśnde Terry road. Demonstrators refused to move from the roadblock as police in helicopters fired teargas grenades and live ammunition.  Eyewitnesses report that police also attacked from both sides firing live rounds into the crowd as people fled into surrounding steep hillsides, many becoming trapped.  As the unarmed demonstrators were being killed and injured some wrestled with police, fighting back in self-defense, which resulted in the reported deaths of nine police officers.  
 In local radio reports the chief of police claimed that the indigenous demonstrators were armed and fired first.  This claim has been strongly rejected by dozens of local eyewitnesses including local journalists who confirmed that Amazonian demonstrators have been entirely peaceful and only bear traditional spears and in no way provoked any violence.  A point highlighted by the fact that the blockades have been going on for 56 days without a single incident. 
   Gregor MacLennan of Amazon Watch who is currently in Bagua gathering first hand testimonies from blockade participants, local journalists and residents stated:eyewitness testimonies say that Special Forces opened fire on peaceful and unarmed demonstrators including from helicopters, killing and wounding dozens in an orchestrated attempt to open the roads.  It seems that the police had come with orders to shoot.  This was not a clash, but a coordinated police raid with police firing on protesters from both sides of their blockade.
  There have been many accounts of atrocities committed by the Special Forces. Some have reported seeing the police throwing liquid on the cadavers and burning them. Also local residents have given accounts of having seen police throwing bodies of dead civilians into the river in an apparent attempt to underreport the number of dead. We've also received accounts that some of those injured were being detained by security forces and denied medical attention leading to additional deaths.   There are many people still reported missing and access to medical attention in the region is horribly inadequate.
  Perus Ombudsmans office issued a strong statement yesterday demanding an end to the violence. Letters condemning the governments actions are pouring in from thousands of Peruvians and international human rights activists and organizations. Today, Victoria Tauli-Corpuz, the chair of the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues of the United Nations issued a letter expressing shock and deep distress at reports received of atrocities committed and calling on the government to,"Immediately cease all violence against indigenous communities and organizations."
Indigenous peoples have vowed to continue protests until the Peruvian Congress revokes free trade decrees issued by President Garcia under special powers granted by Congress in the context of the Free Trade Agreement with the United States.
  In the past two weeks, the Constitutional Committee of Congress has ruled that legislative decrees 994 and 1090 were unconstitutional. The Peruvian Congress was scheduled to debate the revocation of decree 1090 again on Thursday, however, Garcia's political party, for the third time, prevented the debate preferring instead to attack the peaceful blockades. The government Ombudsman office has filed a legal action with the constitutional tribunal regarding the unconstitutionality of decree 1064, which affects the land rights laws in Peru.
 Garcia has rejected several congressional debates on the decrees, opting for violent attacks and brute force that will only worsen this conflict. It is outrageous that the ministers are now attempting to blame the victims for this incident and cover up the number of indigenous people dead, said Gregor MacLennan.
  The protests have provoked national debate about government policies in the Amazon that ignore indigenous peoples and encourage large-scale extractive industries in Amazonian lands. Indigenous peoples assert that new laws undermine their rights and open up their ancestral lands to private companies for mining, logging, plantations, and oil drilling without their consultation or consent.  
  A coalition of human rights and environmental organizations are urging the Garcia Government to stand down and cease violent confrontations by the military and calling for solidarity demonstrations at Peruvian Embassies around the world.

Dear President Obama, this violation of human Indigenous rights and bloodshed  in Peru is not my impression of "Greening America". For many years other US Extractive Industries have wreeked havoc in the Amazonian region.With the recent US-Peruvian Free Trade Agreement and recent elected President Garcia, it seems the level of violations are stepping up. Please read the following news release and tell President Garcia to stop such activity. l hope you will consider revoking the Nafta with Peru if Indigenous rights and Eco systems are contiued with such ill regard.
Bagua, Peru (June 6, 2009)  In the early morning hours on Friday, Peruvian Special Forces staged a violent raid on a group of indigenous people at a peaceful blockade on a road outside of Bagua in a remote area of the northern Peruvian Amazon resulting in 25 civilians confirmed dead and over a hundred wounded.  Over 600 police attacked several thousand unarmed Awajun and Wambis indigenous peoples including many women and children and forcibly dispersed them using tear gas and live ammunition.

Dramatic photos (available on www.amazonwatch.org) of the attack show clearly the police brutally beating and shooting demonstrators at close range.  At 2 am police began to approach the demonstrators as they were sleeping along the Fernando Belaśnde Terry road. Demonstrators refused to move from the roadblock as police in helicopters fired teargas grenades and live ammunition.  Eyewitnesses report that police also attacked from both sides firing live rounds into the crowd as people fled into surrounding steep hillsides, many becoming trapped.  As the unarmed demonstrators were being killed and injured some wrestled with police, fighting back in self-defense, which resulted in the reported deaths of nine police officers.  
 In local radio reports the chief of police claimed that the indigenous demonstrators were armed and fired first.  This claim has been strongly rejected by dozens of local eyewitnesses including local journalists who confirmed that Amazonian demonstrators have been entirely peaceful and only bear traditional spears and in no way provoked any violence.  A point highlighted by the fact that the blockades have been going on for 56 days without a single incident. 
   Gregor MacLennan of Amazon Watch who is currently in Bagua gathering first hand testimonies from blockade participants, local journalists and residents stated:eyewitness testimonies say that Special Forces opened fire on peaceful and unarmed demonstrators including from helicopters, killing and wounding dozens in an orchestrated attempt to open the roads.  It seems that the police had come with orders to shoot.  This was not a clash, but a coordinated police raid with police firing on protesters from both sides of their blockade.
  There have been many accounts of atrocities committed by the Special Forces. Some have reported seeing the police throwing liquid on the cadavers and burning them. Also local residents have given accounts of having seen police throwing bodies of dead civilians into the river in an apparent attempt to underreport the number of dead. We've also received accounts that some of those injured were being detained by security forces and denied medical attention leading to additional deaths.   There are many people still reported missing and access to medical attention in the region is horribly inadequate.
  Perus Ombudsmans office issued a strong statement yesterday demanding an end to the violence. Letters condemning the governments actions are pouring in from thousands of Peruvians and international human rights activists and organizations. Today, Victoria Tauli-Corpuz, the chair of the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues of the United Nations issued a letter expressing shock and deep distress at reports received of atrocities committed and calling on the government to,"Immediately cease all violence against indigenous communities and organizations."
Indigenous peoples have vowed to continue protests until the Peruvian Congress revokes free trade decrees issued by President Garcia under special powers granted by Congress in the context of the Free Trade Agreement with the United States.
  In the past two weeks, the Constitutional Committee of Congress has ruled that legislative decrees 994 and 1090 were unconstitutional. The Peruvian Congress was scheduled to debate the revocation of decree 1090 again on Thursday, however, Garcia's political party, for the third time, prevented the debate preferring instead to attack the peaceful blockades. The government Ombudsman office has filed a legal action with the constitutional tribunal regarding the unconstitutionality of decree 1064, which affects the land rights laws in Peru.
 Garcia has rejected several congressional debates on the decrees, opting for violent attacks and brute force that will only worsen this conflict. It is outrageous that the ministers are now attempting to blame the victims for this incident and cover up the number of indigenous people dead, said Gregor MacLennan.
  The protests have provoked national debate about government policies in the Amazon that ignore indigenous peoples and encourage large-scale extractive industries in Amazonian lands. Indigenous peoples assert that new laws undermine their rights and open up their ancestral lands to private companies for mining, logging, plantations, and oil drilling without their consultation or consent.  
  A coalition of human rights and environmental organizations are urging the Garcia Government to stand down and cease violent confrontations by the military and calling for solidarity demonstrations at Peruvian Embassies around the world. I urge you President Obama to also call the Garcia Government to cease these violent attacks and stop asurping the UN Declaration of Indigenous Rights.
Thankyou for your consideration.

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We signed the "Tell congress no more" petition!
# 24:
11:43 am PDT, Jun 24, Patrice Mykytka, Florida
# 23:
9:32 am PDT, Jun 19, Name not displayed, Canada
We have to stop the genocidal tendancies of the nations of the world.
# 22:
8:48 am PDT, Jun 19, Karla Pankow, Minnesota
not suprising, greed is a dangerous thing.
# 21:
5:10 am PDT, Jun 19, Jay Winter Nightwolf, Maryland
All of us with any common sense at all know that GWBush is a capitalistic, greedy, arrogant, spoiled, mindless _________. However many of us are beginning to understand the fallout of the past Bush administration and Garcia is only a piece of it. Now we have a Black/White president who has captured the hearts and wallets of so many Americans. He has also captured the hearts of some of Native America. Some tribes have adopted Obama and given him a name. Now there is an important history lesson for him to learn. The indigenous people of Peru that were murdered are also the sisters and brothers by blood of all North American Indigenous American Indians. Before the wave of invasion hit North, Central and South America, there were no borders and there were no restrictions on travel. The free trade agreement has brought much pain, suffering and death to many Indigenous people that live south of Tejas (Texas). Enough said. Do not support the aggressive, racist, natural resource stealing, money hungry regime of Garcia. Avo Morales is right.
# 20:
6:25 pm PDT, Jun 18, Melissa Rose, Arizona
# 19:
3:18 pm PDT, Jun 18, Lynise Nelson, Tennessee
# 18:
7:43 am PDT, Jun 18, Elkhorn Vaughan, Maryland
~ One Who Helps The People Throughout The Land, Please remain true to your heart, especially with regard to destructive agreements your predecessor put in motion before he left office. Elkhorn ~
# 17:
12:24 am PDT, Jun 18, Monica Charles, Washington
Genocide of First Nations People must stop. There is no justification. Not oil, not uranium. Stop raping Mother Earth and killing her children.
# 16:
8:41 pm PDT, Jun 17, Amanda Taylor, Florida
# 14:
10:31 pm PDT, Jun 14, Name not displayed, Oregon
# 13:
2:22 pm PDT, Jun 14, Julia Tawyea', Pennsylvania
# 12:
1:30 pm PDT, Jun 14, ALPHA WI, Germany
# 11:
10:19 am PDT, Jun 13, Amy Mulvany, Ireland
# 10:
10:27 am PDT, Jun 11, Priscilla Delaney, Pennsylvania
# 9:
4:10 am PDT, Jun 11, Brian Phillips, United Kingdom
# 8:
7:57 pm PDT, Jun 10, David Dunkleberger, Pennsylvania
# 7:
8:04 am PDT, Jun 10, Name not displayed, California
# 6:
7:32 am PDT, Jun 10, Sue Lotta, Florida
What's occuring in Peru should not go unanswered by the US government. Silencing the already seemingly voicesless as well as the destruction of rainforests should concern us all. Additionally, we seem to have our hands in the crisis through US oil companies involvement. I would hope that your administration would engage in genuine diplomatic efforts to help resolve this issue for the sake of the disadvantaged indigenous people of Peru and the preservation of the integrity of the Earth's delicate ecosystem.
# 5:
7:46 am PDT, Jun 9, Name not displayed, Oregon
This is outrageous! All those who profit from oil have blood on their hands - shameful!
# 4:
4:01 am PDT, Jun 9, David N Moore, Connecticut
# 3:
3:00 am PDT, Jun 9, Bill C, Germany
# 2:
11:59 pm PDT, Jun 8, Name not displayed, Belgium
# 1:
3:30 pm PDT, Jun 8, Martin Sky, New Mexico
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