Berliner Boersenzeitung - Uprooted: Amazonian Siekopai people battle for return to ancestral land

EUR -
AED 3.855359
AFN 71.377323
ALL 98.9304
AMD 409.516427
ANG 1.892125
AOA 958.34413
ARS 1056.623594
AUD 1.615519
AWG 1.889397
AZN 1.783436
BAM 1.959346
BBD 2.119737
BDT 125.457077
BGN 1.955898
BHD 0.395617
BIF 3039.829534
BMD 1.049665
BND 1.414788
BOB 7.281457
BRL 6.100126
BSD 1.0499
BTN 88.512294
BWP 14.342507
BYN 3.435719
BYR 20573.431932
BZD 2.116271
CAD 1.468019
CDF 3012.538394
CHF 0.930822
CLF 0.037165
CLP 1025.470248
CNY 7.599311
CNH 7.606927
COP 4605.667141
CRC 535.068474
CUC 1.049665
CUP 27.81612
CVE 110.686953
CZK 25.297954
DJF 186.546724
DKK 7.457556
DOP 63.403524
DZD 140.299428
EGP 52.079328
ERN 15.744973
ETB 129.119469
FJD 2.388985
FKP 0.828518
GBP 0.835408
GEL 2.875939
GGP 0.828518
GHS 16.58171
GIP 0.828518
GMD 74.526346
GNF 9059.657727
GTQ 8.106673
GYD 219.655948
HKD 8.169091
HNL 26.482792
HRK 7.487532
HTG 137.799417
HUF 409.458002
IDR 16637.71341
ILS 3.824506
IMP 0.828518
INR 88.457727
IQD 1375.585844
IRR 44164.650178
ISK 145.073956
JEP 0.828518
JMD 166.621585
JOD 0.744525
JPY 161.875648
KES 135.931727
KGS 91.099783
KHR 4252.192128
KMF 495.96684
KPW 944.698007
KRW 1469.588545
KWD 0.323055
KYD 0.874917
KZT 524.238873
LAK 23050.641277
LBP 94049.974422
LKR 305.502961
LRD 188.939707
LSL 19.03039
LTL 3.099387
LVL 0.634932
LYD 5.127613
MAD 10.574845
MDL 19.19247
MGA 4901.935038
MKD 61.604812
MMK 3409.270632
MNT 3566.761255
MOP 8.413649
MRU 41.886862
MUR 49.039901
MVR 16.227576
MWK 1821.168622
MXN 21.256448
MYR 4.673157
MZN 67.084504
NAD 19.030647
NGN 1771.288201
NIO 38.575455
NOK 11.650062
NPR 141.620031
NZD 1.795658
OMR 0.404098
PAB 1.04992
PEN 3.982432
PGK 4.225689
PHP 61.895602
PKR 291.596027
PLN 4.312506
PYG 8179.805456
QAR 3.821305
RON 4.976566
RSD 116.999844
RUB 109.171889
RWF 1438.040905
SAR 3.941569
SBD 8.799923
SCR 14.330794
SDG 631.372893
SEK 11.529645
SGD 1.412723
SHP 0.828518
SLE 23.858676
SLL 22010.952976
SOS 599.826672
SRD 37.256789
STD 21725.944051
SVC 9.186628
SYP 2637.314389
SZL 19.030664
THB 36.384557
TJS 11.191784
TMT 3.673827
TND 3.338456
TOP 2.458422
TRY 36.294159
TTD 7.131043
TWD 34.062702
TZS 2781.612304
UAH 43.569361
UGX 3890.040978
USD 1.049665
UYU 44.750999
UZS 13467.200332
VES 48.873774
VND 26682.481618
VUV 124.618326
WST 2.930235
XAF 657.15898
XAG 0.034777
XAU 0.0004
XCD 2.836771
XDR 0.803054
XOF 655.517644
XPF 119.331742
YER 262.33747
ZAR 18.932858
ZMK 9448.244693
ZMW 28.950504
ZWL 337.991668
  • RBGPF

    -0.9500

    59.24

    -1.6%

  • CMSC

    0.0578

    24.73

    +0.23%

  • SCS

    0.5800

    13.85

    +4.19%

  • NGG

    0.2510

    63.361

    +0.4%

  • BCC

    10.0100

    153.79

    +6.51%

  • GSK

    0.2120

    34.172

    +0.62%

  • BCE

    0.2250

    26.995

    +0.83%

  • RIO

    0.7950

    63.145

    +1.26%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0200

    6.78

    -0.29%

  • RELX

    -0.1350

    46.615

    -0.29%

  • AZN

    0.8400

    66.47

    +1.26%

  • JRI

    0.1400

    13.35

    +1.05%

  • BTI

    0.0400

    37.42

    +0.11%

  • CMSD

    0.0970

    24.557

    +0.39%

  • BP

    -0.3350

    29.385

    -1.14%

  • VOD

    0.1950

    8.925

    +2.18%

Uprooted: Amazonian Siekopai people battle for return to ancestral land
Uprooted: Amazonian Siekopai people battle for return to ancestral land / Photo: Pedro PARDO - AFP

Uprooted: Amazonian Siekopai people battle for return to ancestral land

They call themselves "the multicolored people," or Siekopai, after the eye-catching traditional body paint and adornments they used to wear in their ancestral home in the heart of the Amazon rainforest.

Text size:

But the feathered crowns and animal tooth necklaces are now stored away for special occasions as the Siekopai live scattered between villages straddling the Ecuador-Peru border, far from their hunter-gatherer way of life and ancestral territory, which they are fighting to reclaim.

Displaced by decades of war as well as commercial and cultural intrusions, the Siekopai eke out a living doing odd jobs in rural towns bordered by oil fields, palm plantations and a network of busy roads.

The children wear jeans, T-shirts and sneakers, listen to reggaeton and -- instead of learning to fish, hunt and make traditional plant brews when not in school -- stare transfixed at cell phone or tablet screens just like teenagers anywhere else.

With the Siekopai teetering on the brink of cultural extinction, their leaders say it is a matter of survival to reclaim their ancestral land -- still largely untouched in the remote heart of the Amazon.

They call the homeland Pe'keya in the Paicoca language.

"Our big dream is to rebuild our territory -- to reunite our nation, our families along these rivers that are home to the spirits and creatures my grandfather used to tell me about," community leader Justino Piaguaje told AFP at a recent, rare Siekopai reunion in Pe'keya.

The Siekopai are one of 14 recognized Indigenous groups in Ecuador, a country where seven percent of the population identifies as such.

There are not many of them: an estimated 1,200 Siekopai are divided between Ecuador and Peru.

During the war between the neighbors from 1941 to 1998, intense fighting drove them from Pe'keya -- which the Siekopai claim once stretched some three million hectares (7.4 million acres) along the Lagartococha River, which forms part of the Ecuador-Peru border.

On the Ecuadoran side, most of the displaced ended up some 160 kilometers (99 miles) west of their homeland in the rural settlement of San Pablo de Kantesiya, a riverside village that subsists mainly on palm oil and petroleum.

"Since the war, we have never really been able to return to our territory. Brothers and families were separated... and we were cut off from our nourishing roots," said Piaguaje.

- 'Everything comes from here' -

In January, some 200 Siekopai from San Pablo and elsewhere congregated in the village of Manoko on the Peruvian side of the border in Pe'keya, where a handful of their people dwell in wooden houses poised on stilts near the sacred burial grounds of their revered shamans.

It is about a 12-hour journey by motorized boat from San Pablo to Manoko, which is located on the banks of the Lagartococha River.

Lagartococha means Caiman in Paicoca — the river is named after the feared reptiles that dwell in its depths.

Along the journey, the unseen antics of mystery fish and unknown beasts ripple the surface of the dark waters, as colorful birds fly overhead and monkeys howl from giant trees whose roots cling to muddy banks.

Once in Manoko, the Siekopai disembark and erect tents among the hamlet's few houses before falling in line at a community kitchen for a meal of rice, lentils and fish freshly caught from the river.

Over the next days, groups meet on the rudimentary football field or in the school's sole classroom to listen to the stories of elders decked out for the occasion in colorful traditional tunics and feathered headgear, with necklaces of pearls, seeds and animal teeth.

Using plant-based paints, men and women decorate their faces with motifs inspired by jungle animals -- snakes, panthers and spiders.

Everyone speaks Paicoca, but Spanish is heard too.

"This return to Pe'keya is to rediscover ourselves. For the Siekopai, everything comes from here," said community leader Elias Piyahuaje -- a common family name in the area that comes in a variety of spellings.

"New generations do not know this place, its history, its special energy. This meeting aims to strengthen the bonds between the elders and the young," added Piyahuaje, his forehead adorned with a shimmering band of red and yellow feathers.

Among those who made the journey were teens such as 18-year-old Milena, who said she came from San Pedro to "learn about the medicinal herbs and listen to the stories of the elders."

Proud to be Siekopai but tired of "discrimination at school," she told AFP she would like to return to the ancestral homeland with her family.

"I am happy here, among my family and my community. These are my roots," she said.

The Siekopai youth, said Sophie Pinchetti of the non-governmental organization Amazon Frontlines, "live in a complex reality: one foot in the modern, Western world and the other in their territory."

- 'Violation of rights' -

With a 1998 peace agreement between Peru and Ecuador, the Siekopai regained hope of finally returning to their land.

In 2017, a demand was sent to the environment ministry for title to a 42,000-hectare portion of Pe'keya.

Since then, "we had discussions with four successive ministers, without any results," said Justino Piaguaje.

And in 2021, the community launched a court case demanding recognition of its territorial rights.

The legal action, still pending, seeks title deeds, an apology from the Ecuadoran state for "violations of rights" of the Siekopai, and guarantees for a safe return to the land.

There is a major complication, however: Pe'keya lies in the heart of a vast protected area -- the Cuyabeno Wildlife Reserve -- that was created in 1979 and covers nearly 600,000 hectares.

The reserve is part of a complex ecosystem with hundreds of rivers, lakes and pools, that was listed by the Ecuadoran government in 2017 as a Wetland of International Importance under the global Ramsar Convention.

It hosts more than 200 species of reptiles and amphibians, some 600 types of birds and 167 mammal types. Many are threatened species, including the Amazon river dolphin, the giant otter, the manatee and the arapaima, one of the world's largest freshwater fish.

In 2007, Indigenous groups signed an agreement with the government that granted the Siekopai rights to use, but not own, 8,000 hectares of the reserve in an area that overlaps with Pe'keya.

Members of the Kichwa, Shuar, Cofan, Zabalo and Siona Indigenous groups were given rights to other land nearby.

Observers say the government and oil and mining companies stoke rivalries between the groups to thwart their land claims and maintain access to territory containing natural resources such as oil that may yet be found in the Amazon.

"The state doesn't want to protect us. It just wants to exploit the wealth of our territories," charged Piaguaje.

The government did not respond to AFP's requests for comment on the matter.

- 'Cannot abandon the struggle' -

The meeting in Manoko offered a glimpse into the past -- and a look at a culture in peril.

"We are people of the rivers... with knowledge of plants and lagoons," said Piaguaje, who like many Siekopai dreams of returning to the earlier life of fishing, hunting and itinerant farming.

At Manoko, elders hosted informal workshops explaining traditional fishing techniques using ant eggs, fruit and seeds to a younger generation.

Youngsters are also schooled in the hunting of caimans -- at night and with harpoons -- a hazardous endeavor as the meters-long reptiles are known to attack small boats.

Monkeys, too, are a favored meat source -- hunted no longer with a blowpipe and poison darts as in the old days, but with shotguns.

The Siekopai boast knowledge of more than 1,000 plants, including the "yage" hallucinogenic vine used in shamanic rites that create a bridge to the spirit world.

"Yage is vital to us," said Piaguaje. "If we lose the yage, we lose our spirituality. We will fall into ignorance, we will lose the wisdom of the elders. We will no longer listen to the animals and spirits of the jungle and the rivers."

To retain this knowledge, he insisted, the Siekopai must return to their territory.

"We cannot abandon the struggle... or the Siekopai will disappear like some jungle animals disappeared overnight," added Elias Piyahuaje.

(A.Berg--BBZ)