Edwin Chota

للمزيد من المعلومات يُرجى الاتصال بـ

المنطقة:الأمريكتان

البلد:بيرو

المقاطعة/المحافظة/الولاية:يوكايالي

الجنس1:ذكر

العمر:52

تأريخ القتل:01/09/2014

نوع القتل:إطلاق نار

تهديدات سابقة:نعم

حالة التحقيق:تم اعتقال الجاني/الجناة

نوع العمل:شخصية اجتماعية

قطاع او نوع العمل الحقوقي الذي كان فيه المدافع (المدافعة) عن حقوق الإنسان:حقوق اقتصادية واجتماعية وثقافية

تفاصيل القطاع:حقوق السكان الأصليين, حقوق تنموية

معلومات اكثر:Front Line Defenders

1قاعدة البيانات هذه تسجل الهوية الجنسانية التي يختارها الأفراد لأنفسهم. فإذا لم يقوموا بتحديد جنسهم كذكر أو أنثى يمكنهم تسجيل أنفسهم باستخدام خيار آخر / لا ذكر ولا أنثى أو مصطلح الهويات بين الجنسين غير الثنائية..

Source The Washington Post

Authorities in Peru have charged five men in the timber industry with the 2014 murders of four indigenous activists who had battled illegal logging in the Amazon jungle.

Two timber executives and three loggers have been charged with the shooting deaths of the activists, prosecutor Otoniel Jara, who works in Peru’s remote Ucayali region, told The Associated Press on Wednesday.

Environmentalists say the case is unprecedented in Peru, where years of illegal logging and, on occasion, suspected attacks by those carrying it out have often been met with an ineffectual response from authorities.

“We hope that the legacy of the victims of this massacre can lead to justice,” said Tom Bewick, of Rainforest Foundation US, a group that funded efforts to bring the alleged killers to justice.

Bewick said he hoped the case will “set an example for other indigenous environmental defenders across the world.”

The indigenous group’s leader, Edwin Chota, along with Jorge Ríos Pérez, Leoncio Quinticima, and Francisco Pinedo, were found dead on Sept. 1, 2014.

Authorities say the men were killed with shotgun blasts in the Upper Tamaya-Saweto Asháninka indigenous territory along Peru’s border with Brazil.

The activists had defended the forests, travelling by canoe for three days to the regional capital city, Pucallpa, to file complaints and urge forestry officials to take action. They urged prosecutors to stop illegal logging, presenting photos and sketches they made of destruction they found.

Prosecutors say the five suspects could face up to 35 years in jail if convicted. Timber executives José Estrada and Hugo Soria are accused of ordering the killings, which were allegedly carried out by loggers Eurico Mapes, Josimar Atachi and Segundo Atachi.

The Associated Press was not immediately able to reach the suspects or their attorneys for comment.

During the five-year investigation, the men have publicly denied the charges. They remain free and are believed to be living in the remote jungles of Peru.

Jara, the prosecutor, said prosecutors who were assigned to the case before him had abandoned it.

Jara said the three loggers had been in the area where the bodies were found, while the two businessmen had lost revenue after the indigenous activists accused them of illegal logging.

On one occasion, Estrada, one of the timber executives, allegedly referred to Chota, telling witnesses: “I’ll pay whatever… I want his head,” according to documents filed by prosecutors.

The bodies of Chota and Quintisima were found, while those of Rios and Pinedo are still missing.

Global Witness, an organization that investigates corruption and environmental abuse, has said 164 environmentalists were killed worldwide in 2018. About half were killed in Latin American nations including Brazil, Chile, Colombia, and Guatemala.

Mauro Pío, an indigenous environmental leader who sought to protect Peru’s Amazon region, was shot dead in 2013. No suspects have been charged.

Relatives of the four Peruvian activists killed in 2014 say the jungle territory of their community remains vulnerable. But they welcomed the charges, hoping it signals a shift toward more robust protections for indigenous groups.

“This is good,” said Asháninka Diana Ríos, daughter of Jorge Ríos, one of the murdered activists. “This is not going to be filed away and forgotten.”

Copyright 2019 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


إذا كنتم ترغبون في تقديم ذكريات شخصية، يرجى مراسلتنا على البريد الإلكتروني : HRDMemorial@frontlinedefenders.org

Edwin Chota

للمزيد من المعلومات يُرجى الاتصال بـ

المنطقة:الأمريكتان

البلد:بيرو

المقاطعة/المحافظة/الولاية:يوكايالي

الجنس1:ذكر

العمر:52

تأريخ القتل:01/09/2014

نوع القتل:إطلاق نار

تهديدات سابقة:نعم

حالة التحقيق:تحقيق بلا نتيجة

نوع العمل:شخصية اجتماعية

قطاع او نوع العمل الحقوقي الذي كان فيه المدافع (المدافعة) عن حقوق الإنسان:حقوق اقتصادية واجتماعية وثقافية

تفاصيل القطاع:حقوق السكان الأصليين, حقوق تنموية

معلومات اكثر:Front Line Defenders

1قاعدة البيانات هذه تسجل الهوية الجنسانية التي يختارها الأفراد لأنفسهم. فإذا لم يقوموا بتحديد جنسهم كذكر أو أنثى يمكنهم تسجيل أنفسهم باستخدام خيار آخر / لا ذكر ولا أنثى أو مصطلح الهويات بين الجنسين غير الثنائية..

Source The Guardian

Illegal loggers have been blamed for the murder of four Asheninka natives including a prominent anti-logging campaigner, Edwin Chota, near the Peruvian frontier with Brazil.

Authorities in Peru have confirmed that Chota, the leader of Alto Tamaya-Saweto, a community in Peru’s Amazon Ucayali region, fought for his people’s right to gain titles to their land and expel illegal loggers who raided their forests on the Brazilian border. He featured in reports by National Geographic and the New York Times that detailed how death threats were made against him and members of his community.

“This is a terribly sad outcome. And the saddest part is that it was a foreseen event,” said Julia Urrunaga, Peru director for the Environmental Investigation Agency, an international conservation group.

“It was widely known that Edwin Chota and other leaders from the Alto Tamaya-Saweto community were asking for protection from the Peruvian authorities because they were receiving death treats from the illegal loggers operating in their area.”

Local leader Reyder Sebastian Quinticuari, the president of Aconamac, an association of Ashaninka communities, told local media that Edwin Chota and his companions were killed on 1 September but the news was delayed due to the remoteness of the location.

The circumstances of the deaths are not clear but one local indigenous leader, Robert Guimaraes Vasquez, told a newspaper that illegal loggers bound and shot Chota and companions on the sports field in their village in front of the inhabitants. He said illegal loggers were taking revenge after having been reported to the authorities.

The Associated Press said the other slain men were identified by a police official in Pucallpa, the regional capital, as Jorge Rios, who was Chota’s deputy, Leoncio Quincicima and Francisco Pinedo.

“Edwin Chota’s widow and other villagers travelled for six days by river to come here to report this crime,” Peru’s vice minister of intercultural affairs, Patricia Balbuena, told the Guardian. She had travelled to the regional capital, Pucallpa, to further investigate the case.

“There are no military or police posts in these dangerous border regions and that must change,” she added, indicating police would travel to the scene of the crime as part of the investigation.

Henderson Rengifo, a leader with Peru’s largest indigenous federation, Aidesep, called on the Peruvian state to do more protect indigenous people from criminal mafias.

“There’s so much corruption in the regional governments that these logging mafias can kill our brothers with impunity,” he told the Guardian.

“We must ensure that justice is done and this crime does not go unpunished.”

A 2012 World Bank report estimated that as much as 80% of Peru’s logging exports are harvested illegally [PDF] and investigations have revealed that the wood is typically laundered using doctored papers to make it appear legal and ship it out of the country; while a 2012 report by the Environmental Investigation Agency indicated at least 40% of official cedar exports to the US included illegally logged timber.

A recent operation conducted by Peruvian customs looked at other timber species and, in three months, stopped the export of a volume of illegally logged timber equivalent to more than six Olympic pools.


إذا كنتم ترغبون في تقديم ذكريات شخصية، يرجى مراسلتنا على البريد الإلكتروني : HRDMemorial@frontlinedefenders.org