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OUR VIEWPOINT
Victory
of local peoples against corporate plantations
“The city of
Vitoria in Brazil, owes its name to the “victory” of the
colonialist Portuguese against the original indigenous inhabitants of
the land. Today, the same name has a totally different meaning. The
indigenous Tupinikim and Guarani peoples have retaken the lands that
were stolen from them by the giant pulp mill corporation Aracruz Cellulose.
They have been joined in the struggle against the company and its plants
by other local communities and organizations from civil society who,
through uniting in the struggle, have weakened the company’s power.
They have thus become a symbol of victory for peoples all over the world
who are fighting against similar corporations.”
The above is the opening
paragraph of the “Vitoria Declaration” (see full text in
this bulletin), issued on 24 November by representatives of organizations
from Africa, Asia, Latin America, Europe and the United States attending
an International Meeting on Plantations organized by WRM, FASE-Espirito
Santo and Global Justice Ecology Project.
The symbolic significance
of the victory of two “weak” indigenous communities against
a “powerful” company was decisive in choosing the city of
Vitoria for holding this meeting, which brought together people fighting
for the rights of local communities throughout the world against the
power of similar corporations.
More importantly, the
meeting aimed at identifying the reasons for this and other victories
as a means of strengthening the worldwide campaign against large-scale
tree monocultures.
Apart from learning
from the experience of the struggle in Brazil, participants shared the
findings of a number of case studies on different types of plantations
in South Africa, Uganda, Ecuador, Chile, Cambodia and Indonesia (summarized
in the relevant articles below).
The meeting also discussed
extensively on strategies to confront the new threat posed by genetically
engineered trees, which could eventually result in the use of those
trees in industrial plantations (see relevant article). Further issues
such as carbon sink plantations, northern campaigns on paper consumption,
certification and alternative approaches to community forest use were
also addressed.
Even more importantly,
participants were able to interact directly with the local people fighting
against plantations, including a field trip to visit the Tupinikim and
Guarani indigenous peoples in their recovered lands and to a camp of
the Landless Rural Workers Movement struggling to access land currently
occupied by Aracruz Cellulose (see article on Brazil). After suffering
the horrible stink from the huge Aracruz Cellulose pulp mill, those
visits provided real hope –as the World Social Forum states- that
another world is possible. That new possible world is actually growing
in the less expected place: behind the unending and monotonous rows
of eucalyptus plantations.
Victory of local peoples
against corporate plantations is of course not easy, but the Vitoria
example proves that it is possible. It may take years –as it did
in this case- but if people are sufficiently determined, victory can
be theirs –as it was in this case.
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