Ecuador Beefs Up Security as Indians Vow Protests | Amazon Watch
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Ecuador Beefs Up Security as Indians Vow Protests

March 19, 2006 | Alonso Soto | Reuters

Quito, Ecuador – Ecuadorean troops tightened security on highways around Quito on Monday as Indian leaders threatened to renew protests against this week’s free trade talks with the United States.

Thousands of Indian protesters blockaded major roads in Ecuador’s highland provinces last week to demand the government abandon talks for the trade pact they fear will damage their livelihoods and way of life.

The protests, which cost Ecuador millions of dollars in lost commerce, were the latest test to President Alfredo Palacio, a cardiologist with little political backing who says he will not quit trade talks in Washington.

“We will not allow these marches to reach Quito because they aim to destabilize democracy,” the president’s spokesman Enrique Proano told Reuters.

“The armed forces have dispatched a contingent along the highways leading to Quito,” said Proano, who would not say how many troops.

After centuries of discrimination by a white and mestizo elite, Indians organized politically and helped overthrow President Jamil Mahuad in 2000. The movement recently lost momentum due to internal bickering, but is still one of the most powerful voices for indigenous people in the Americas.

“For too many years we have been discriminated against,” said Dioselinda Iza, an Indian leader wearing a traditional long shawl and short-rimmed hat. “Enough is enough, we have to stop this deal.”

SERIES OF STRIKES

Palacio, who came to office 10 months ago after Congress fired his predecessor, has faced a series of strikes and protests from provinces seeking more financing from the state before presidential elections in October.

It was unclear, however, how much support Indian communities could mobilize for new protests after demonstrations fizzled last week when indigenous leaders from several provinces decided to return home to rest.

In San Ignacio, a tiny village nestled in the Andes mountains 55 miles (90 km) south of Quito, leaders from 30 nearby Indian communities gathered over the weekend to decide on their strategy for more protests.

Ecuador meets with the United States in Washington on Thursday for free trade talks. Andean neighbors Colombia and Peru have already signed deals.

Ecuadorean Indians fear a trade deal with the United States will disrupt agricultural traditions that have been passed on for several generations.

Indians throughout the Andes harvest potatoes, corn and other products for consumption in their hamlets. As part of the communal tradition surplus harvest is sold in local markets.

But a trade deal, many here fear, will flood markets with cheap American farm products, leaving thousands of Indians without resources to maintain their lands and pushing them out of their communities and into the cities.

Local economists and the government say any trade deal will not affect the commerce of crops produced in the Central region where most of the Indians live.

Some estimates say around 30 percent of Ecuador’s 13 million citizens are Indian.

“This trade deal will starve us to death,” said Maria Sillo, a mother of three who plants vegetables and makes around $15 a week with what she sells in a nearby market. “We prefer to die fighting this deal than to starve to death.”

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