Leapfrogging the Law:
Deforestation of Indigenous Lands in Northern Argentina The
recent troubles in Argentina have brought that one wealthy country
to world attention. The impoverishment of the middle classes, and
the growing cynicism of the people's view of their politicians,
have been widely reported. No coverage, though, has been given to
Argentina's very poorest - the country's First Peoples, vilified
as 'savages' by the settler population and consigned to voicelessness
by the press.
The lowland tropical forests of northern Argentina, known to the
Incas as the Chaco, are home to numerous indigenous peoples. Between
the two rivers that cross the Chaco, the Pilcomayo and the Bermejo,
live the Wichí people. Within this area, which is about half
the size of England, there are approximately 50,000 Wichí,
making them one of the largest and most widespread indigenous peoples
of lowland South America. Traditionally they live in clusters of
relatively small, mobile, kin-based communities. Food-production
is sustainably based on seasonal hunting, gathering, gardening and
fishing.
Wichí culture disallows aggression, because
it is understood to be the antithesis of proper personhood and the
undoing of human society. Instead, value is placed on the spiritual
aspect of human beings, which manifests itself in 'goodwill'. For
the Wichí, goodwill is the essence of social life - it keeps
the peace and consolidates community relations. A leader, whom the
Wichí identify as the linchpin of collective life, should
be a person of exemplary goodwill, giving without counting the cost
and working selflessly on behalf of his (or sometimes her) dependents,
whose well-being is his/her responsibility. The shaman - a (male
or female) spirit-healer - complements the leader by protecting
community members against illness, understood as a spiritual affliction
caused directly or indirectly by a lack of goodwill.
Besides leaders and shamans, the Wichí
have another resource that secures their physical and spiritual
integrity (their 'greenness' and 'goodwill', in Wichí terms).
This is their land, meaning particularly its forest cover. The Wichí
are forest people, even to the extent that they compare themselves
to trees, saying that they are born of their lands like the trees
rooted in the earth. In Wichí cosmology, the world is a forest
bordered by rivers and mountains.That forest, they say, is their
'source of life' and their 'protection'. It provides food, medicines
and the materials on which their social life and material culture
are founded. And it acts as a shelter against an otherwise excruciating
climate. The highest temperatures in South America (over 40°
C) have been recorded in Wichí territory. Without the forest
biomass, only lizards can survive the wilting heat of the sun. And
the soil is rapidly eroded by tropical rainstorms and strong winds.
The Chaco forest is very diverse in its composition
and structure, ranging from a relatively high canopy with little
undergrowth to a dense tangle of creepers, cacti, trunks and branches
that claw at the unwary with fierce thorns. By virtue of its impenetrability,
it has shielded the Wichí from large-scale military campaigns,
colonization and extractive industries. But soldiers, settlers and
timber merchants have been steadily advancing on the Wichí
and their lands since the days of the Spanish empire. Given their
aversion to aggression, the Wichí have not opposed this invasion
of their lands, trusting in goodwill to prevail and prevent loss
of life. But four centuries of ever-increasing contact have taught
them that their goodwill is not reciprocated. The outsiders have
come in the interests of greed rather than goodwill. For the best
part of 100 years, even the remotest regions in the Wichí's
homelands have been appropriated by absentee land-speculators or
overrun by land-hungry frontiersmen. Today the Wichí's forests
are lacerated with the scars of non-indigenous livestock-raising,
logging and oil extraction.
Most recently, and most perniciously, a new attack
has been launched against the Wichí and their homelands:
extensive clear-cut deforestation carried out in the interests of
agribusiness. Having been ransacked for their commercially valuable
hardwoods, the ancestral forests of the Wichí are now being
bulldozed and reduced to ashes by Argentine, Chilean, Paraguayan
and Korean companies such as Desdelsur, Los Cordobeses, and Hermanos
Molina.
Deforestation is a brutal act of machismo: laying the earth bare
by strip-clearing its forest cover is like skinning an animal alive.
If you bear in mind that deforestation is immediately followed by
sowing the exposed soil with agricultural seeds, it begins to look
like a form of rape: tearing the clothes off a woman's body for
the sake of forced insemination. For the Wichí, watching
from the edge of the remaining forest, it is a case of contemplating
the ugly underside of Argentine nation-building - tractors hauling
logs out of the forest, agricultural machinery obliterating the
biodiverse environment, low-flying light aircraft filling the air
with agrochemicals. All the while, these activities carried out
in a spirit of capitalist enterprise inflict a lingering death on
the indigenous inhabitants. Slaughtered on the altar of material
progress, the Wichí, like indigenous peoples throughout the
world, are the sacrificial victims of so-called 'human evolution'.
This evolutionary progress, however, is illicit,
because deforestation violates both indigenous and environmental
laws operating within Argentina. The provincial government is happy
to issue deforestation permits - declaring them to be in the interests
of the local economy - but the permits themselves are unlawful.
Permission to deforest is granted without taking the Wichí
into account, as though they were not there, whereas according to
the Constitution they are entitled to full ownership of their traditional
territory. The permits also contravene the conservationist principles
enshrined in environmental legislation. The Argentine legislature
passes progressive laws which the administration famously disobeys.
And if you take the matter to court, the judiciary finds in favour
of the administration - by arguing, typically, that indigenous and
environmental rights are less important than rights to private property
and development.
Further irregularities invariably occur
in the deforestation operation itself, which never fails to flout
the regulations concerning the procedure that should be followed.
To give just one example, there is a regulation requiring that strips
of forest be left intact, but it is never respected. When the Wichí
report such contraventions to the authorities, the bureaucratic
state machinery grinds into action, inspections are carried out,
the wrongdoings are recorded . . . and the matter stops there, no
matter how many times the Wichí lodge a complaint. There
is an undisguised symbiosis between government and capital investment,
one that unabashedly condones the destruction of a millenial culture
and its millenial ecosystem. This brazen disregard for legality
on the part of judges, politicians and private enterprise is what
the Wichí refer to as 'leapfrogging the law'.
What hope is there for the Wichí and the indigenous peoples
of the Chaco, if Argentina continues to treat the fragile natural
environment so recklessly and fails to heed the cries against this
injustice?
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