Apr 16, 2015

Mapuche: Indigenous Communities Not Consulted in Authorisation Process to Expand Factory


 

The Celulosa Horcones Company, based in Southern Chile, has been given approval to expand its factory. This authorisation  is regretted by the Mapuche communities, who argue that this decision is in violation of Convention 169 of the International Labour Organization (ILO), according to which indigenous peoples have the right to be consulted on issues that affect them. 

 

Below is an article published by Telesur TV:

Five indigenous Mapuche communities from the Bio-Bio region in Southern Chile are seeking to annul an approval granted to the Celulosa Horcones Company to expand their factory, saying the community was not properly consulted.

Representatives from the affected Mapuche communities approached federal officials from the Environmental Evaluation Service to rescind the environmental impact study approved in February by the Environmental Evaluation Commission of the Bio-Bio region.

The Mapuche representatives argue that the wood pulp mill project violates Convention 169 of the International Labour Organization (ILO), which stipulates that indigenous peoples must be consulted on issues that affect them.

On their website, the ILO states that this convention “requires that these peoples are able to engage in free, prior and informed participation in policy and development processes that affect them.”

Chile ratified Convention 169 in 2008.

The representatives from the affected communities stated that they were not consulted about this project, therefore its approval should be annulled.

The Environmental Evaluation Service has given the company, Celulosa Horcones, until April 24 to respond.

Indigenous Mapuche communities have a long history of resisting unwelcome development projects in their lands. Several Mapuche communities will be gathering in the city of Valdivia, in the south of Chile, Wednesday for a gathering to organize further strategies of resistance.

Photo Courtesy of El Ciudadano