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Standoff Between Maya Communities And Us Capital Energy In The South

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For months, tensions have been mounting between SATIIM, the Sarstoon Temash Institute of Indigenous Management, and US Capital Energy Limited that is carrying out pre-drilling activities within Maya communal lands in the Sarstoon Temash National Park. On Wednesday, despite numerous court rulings affirming the rights of the Maya on communal lands, Government waived
the expiration date of the permit granting the oil company entry into the protected area. On the heels of that decision, on Thursday, representatives from thirty-eight communities headed to the village of Sunday Wood, one of five buffer communities and an access point to the operation of US Capital Energy in the area.  The undertaking was no easy feat for the Mayas, who, already feeling disrespected and insulted, had to obtain permission from the oil company to get to their own communal land. News Five’s Isani Cayetano was on the scene and has the following report.

 

Isani Cayetano, Reporting

A concert of voices, albeit joined in various iterations of prayer, is the climax of an excursion to Sunday Wood.  Men, women and children, approximately a hundred villagers from across the indigenous Maya community, have congregated along this seven-mile stretch.  In their native tongue supplications are being recited, seeking moral and spiritual guidance to resolve an ongoing conflict.  The symbolic gathering is an act of rebellion against the powers that be.

 

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Pablo Mis, Program Coordinator, Maya Leaders Alliance

“If it is a crime to walk on our own land, if it is a crime to walk freely on our own land then let them take us where they want to take us.”

 

It is a day after the Government of Belize issued a letter waiving the deadline for a permit granted to U.S. Capital Energy to conduct exploratory work within the Sarstoon Temash National Park.

 

Greg Ch’oc, Executive Director, SATIIM

“From now on there’s going to be a vigorous monitoring of every detail of U.S. Capital Energy’s activity.”

 

Since its arrival a few years ago, the multinational oil company has found itself in a fix with the buffer communities fringing this protected area.  Despite successive rulings by the Supreme Court, affirming and endorsing communal land rights, the Maya of southern Belize are repeatedly disrespected.

 

Greg Ch’oc

“We are fortified by the Supreme Court judgment, several of them.  We are right, not only morally but we are right legally.  If there is anybody that is breaking the law of this country it is the Government of Belize.  If there is anybody that upholds the violation of the constitution of this country and enforces our political leaders’ arrogant policies towards the indigenous people it is the police.  So they are the lawbreakers, they are the lawbreakers.  We have every right to be where we are because the Supreme Court has successively said this land belongs to the Maya community.”

 

Notwithstanding that decree, permission to enter the national park from this particular access point has to be sought from U.S. Capital.  As part of its work within the area, the company has constructed a rock-strewn road leading to the A1 drill site.  Today, a delegation of leaders from the thirty-eight Mayan communities has journeyed to Sunday Wood and its members are intent on crossing the restricted entrance.

 

Dr. Michael Tewes, Health, Safety & Environmental Supervisor, U.S. Capital Energy

“We have had this discussion many times.  The company has always invited any village leader who would like to come in to visit the site, to please get in touch with us, let us know your desire that you want to visit and we would facilitate the visit. We have no problem to let any alcalde, second alcalde, chairman to come in, but we cannot have all this crowd go back there and be walking around.  It is unsafe.  There is a swamp back there.  We asked the last time, we asked please don’t bring children.  We took the entire village of Sunday Wood to visit, right and we asked them, “please don’t bring the children because we don’t know, we can’t see.”  People might fall in the swamp, we don’t know and then we are liable, you understand.”

 

In spite of the likelihood of injury caused by having children wandering around the location, a brief conference among themselves returned an ultimatum.

 

Pablo Mis

“The response from the leaders and the community members is that they want to join their alcaldes and the chairman that’s here, as we’ve been saying the purpose is to go and see what’s happening out there.  This is Maya lands and we want to be able to enter the land.”

 

Dr. Michael Tewes

“Mr. Mis, let me try and make it simpler for the people, right.  This is a big crowd of people, we can’t deal with all of this, we can’t deal with the security of this crowd.”

 

Before long, the police, who remained on standby since receiving word of the crowd’s intention, would become involved.

 

Inspector Ernel Dominguez, Deputy O.C., Punta Gorda Police

“The oil company, or the oil company representative, is saying that you did not go through the proper process to have this visit done today.  If you did not go through that proper process then you are giving people the reason to want to, one: to oppose on what you are doing or to create problems on the other side.”

 

Greg Ch’oc

“We have three boatloads of people from the sea coming into the site so we don’t need to be negotiating here.”

 

Pablo Mis

“Mr. Dominguez, you seem to be taking the lead in this discussion, I want to ask you for the record, are you speaking on behalf of the Government of Belize and the oil company expressing that the government is exercising a compulsory acquisition of Maya land?  Are you preventing Maya people from walking on their land?  It’s a yes or no question.  It’s a yes or no question; otherwise we’re going to walk across.”

 

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Regardless of the answer which Inspector Ernel Dominguez attempted to give, the crowd would hear nothing of it.  Instead, he cautioned MLA’s Program Coordinator Pablo Mis, as well as President of the Toledo Alcaldes Association, Alfonso Cal.

 

Insp. Ernel Dominguez

“Besides all these people here I will hold you and you accountable for anything that should go out of the ordinary.  Please have that recorded that I will hold you accountable, so if after five, ten days you see the police come to your house to pick you up, we will not be picking up all of these people, dah you and you.”

 

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“You have to pick up all ah we. You have to pick up; all ah we.”

 

And with that the throng stormed the access, proceeding on foot a distance shorter than half a mile into the territory, before stopping abruptly to hold worship.  The idea, from the onset, however, was to understand the lay of the land, as it concerns U.S. Capital’s activities within the Sarstoon Temash. Reporting for News Five, I am Isani Cayetano.

 

This afternoon, the Ministry of Science Energy and Technology issued a release clarifying that, “The permit issued to US Capital Energy Belize Ltd by the Forestry Department is a permit to enter the Sarstoon-Temash National Park for the purpose of conducting petroleum exploration drilling operations and not a permit to conduct drilling operations.”


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