NISGUA Celebrates a Successful Fall Speaking Tour
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In November, NISGUA partnered with the Association of Communities for Development and the Defense of Natural Resources (ACODET) for a 14-day speaking tour, "How to Stop a Dam with Indigenous Resistance." The tour visited Washington, Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, and Sonora, Mexico, with a focus on facilitating direct exchange between Maya Mam leader José Gómez and Indigenous Peoples in the U.S.
Our first stop in Seattle featured a panel discussion at the Duwamish Longhouse and Cultural Center with indigenous and ally organizers fighting for environmental justice. Panel members highlighted the importance of centering the voices of directly impacted communities when deciding strategy to protect the Earth. Read a full report from our stop in Seattle here.
Tours are one of our core strategies to build direct relationships between social movements in Guatemala and the U.S. In the current political moment, we believe we need these connections more urgently than ever, and we couldn't make it happen without dedicated organizers and volunteers. MIL GRACIAS to our lead organizers this year: Phil Neff, Rebeca Zúniga-Hamlin, Kayla Autumn Myers, Laura Von Dohlen, and Katie Sharar. We appreciate your commitment and hard work! Learn more about this year's organizing crew on our blog, and reach out to learn more about how you can get involved with future speaking tours!
Coming soon: Stay tuned for further coverage of the tour, which also included participation in a 3-day symposium on Indigenous-led water protection in Las Cruces, New Mexico; a celebration with the Denver Justice & Peace Committee, who honored ACODET with their Global Justice & Peace Award; and participation in the School of the Americas Watch Border Encuentro in Nogales, Mexico.
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Community members from Mataquescuintla march to commemorate the six-year anniversary of their 2012 consultation.
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Communities Celebrate Another Year of Resistance
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The municipality of Uspantán recently celebrated eight years since holding a community consultation in which people from 186 different communities voted no to the imposition of hydroelectric, mining, and mono-crops. Uspantán stood with Cobán and Ixcán in rejecting the imposition of the Xalalá hydroelectric project, which would displace and otherwise impact multiple communities in the Copón and Chixoy Rivers watershed.
Meanwhile in the southeastern municipality of Mataquescuintla, thousands of people gathered on November 11, 2018 to commemorate the 6th anniversary of the municipal referendum on mining. The 2012 referendum, which saw 98.42% of participants reject mining, is one of several that have taken place in the area and has played a key role in preventing the unchecked expansion of mining activities.
These yearly celebrations show the importance of community consultations to people organizing to defend their territories and waters. Consultations are not merely votes, but are community organizing tools that build inclusive, consensus-based decision-making. They are also important reference points for communities facing corporate- and government-sponsored threats, criminalization, defamation, and attacks in response to their resistance. You can read more about consultations in our summer report.
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SIGN THE PETITION:
In the face of regulatory threats to community consultation practices, ACODET released a statement along with Indigenous organizations in Guatemala, the U.S., and Canada calling for the respect of Indigenous communities’ rights to consultation.
ACODET and NISGUA call on you to stand with Indigenous Peoples to demand respect for Indigenous self-determination in Guatemala.
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ACODET Releases Statement in the Face of Attacks against Water Defenders
While José Gómez represented ACODET on tour with NISGUA, the organization continued its work in Guatemala to denounce threats currently faced by water defenders. On November 13, they released a statement defending Bernardo Caal, a Q’eqchi’ organizer targeted for protecting the Oxec and Cahabón Rivers against a series of hydroelectric projects. The statement also called out attacks and defamation against the Peaceful Resistance of Ixquisis, which has organized to resist the imposition of three hydroelectric projects under construction in their territory. Activists critical of the dam have been met with criminalization and violence, including the 2017 assassination of Sebastian Alonso Juan which remains in impunity. ACODET also denounced the ongoing defamation of Rigoberto Juárez, Coordinator of the Plurinational Ancestral Government of the Maya Q’anjob’al, Chuj, Akateka, Popti and Mestiza Peoples.
In the context of the recent threats against water defenders, ACODET remembered the long history of killings and destruction that have accompanied the imposition of hydroelectric projects saying, “We cannot remain silent in the face of a wave of violence against the rights of Indigenous peoples, for defending the land that gives us food and the rivers that give us life.”
NISGUA accompanies many of the people and communities mentioned in this statement, including ACODET, Rigoberto Juárez, and the Peaceful Resistance of Ixquisis.
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