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Indigenous forest monitors from Nuevo Saposoa and Patria Nueva investigate deforestation on their territories

Nuevo Saposoa and Patria Nueva Obtain Legal Rights to Their Lands

After nine years of struggle and violent conflict with coca growers and illegal loggers, the native Shipibo-Conibo communities of Nuevo Saposoa and Patria Nueva were granted land title expansions that now reach the border of the 1.4 million hectare Sierra del Divisor National Park. The land title expansions have been vehemently opposed by agriculture interests, many of whom are documented to have illegally cultivated coca and burned hundreds of hectares of forest.

“This means so much to my community,” explained Roberto Guerra “The people of Patria Nueva have suffered a lot for this title, and have even died in this struggle.”

Robert Guerra, the president of Patria Nueva, arrived in the capital of Ucayali on March 22nd to collect the land title expansion. “This means so much to my community,” he said. “The people of Patria Nueva have suffered a lot for this title, and have even died in this struggle.” Eliceo Picón of Patria Nueva was murdered in 2012 in an attempt to confront illegal coca operations in the area. Nobody has been investigated or prosecuted for this crime, adding to the dozens of environmental activists that have been killed with impunity in Peru during the past decade.

The land title expansions for these communities seal up the southern border of the Sierra Del Divisor buffer zone, which community forest monitors have been tirelessly protecting for two years using the Peruvian Ministry of Environment’s state of the art satellite detection system to detect new deforestation. The community monitors who work with Peruvian National Parks Service (SERNANP) use smart phone mapping systems and small drones to locate hidden coca fields and measure rampant illegal deforestation carried out by agriculturalists occupying their territory. Using this monitoring system, with support and training from Rainforest Foundation US, the two Shipibo-Conibo communities and SERNANP were able to document dozens of coca fields and recently burned rainforest.

The occupying agriculturalists formed an association called ‘Eden’ which actively opposed the land title expansions, and began threatening community leaders after their monitoring efforts led to regional government investigations last February. Guerra, testifying before the criminal prosecutor’s office, said that he had been told by one of the leaders of Eden that “your blood will spill before we leave.”

Land is being illegally cleared throughout the region as coca growers move deeper into the forest

Since being granted the 3,509-hectare and the 6,283-hectare land titling expansions, Nuevo Saposoa and Patria Nueva have been planning to remove the occupiers and reforest the hundreds of hectares that have been destroyed. On March 24th, assemblies from both communities, newly empowered by their land title, declared that they will confront the occupiers and insist that they leave their forest. “The land title gives us legal recognition of our territory, and now we want to reclaim it and turn it back into forest because we are the protectors of the Sierra Divisor National Park,” said Teofilo Magpi, the president of Nuevo Saposoa, adding “We need support from the government because they don’t want to leave and we are afraid that they will be violent.”

Conflicts and deforestation from land invasions and coca production have intensified in Ucayali over the past three years, where vulnerable indigenous communities frequently find themselves openly threatened and without government support. Thousands of migrants from other provinces, often in the service of illegal logging and drug trafficking networks, have been pouring into the region to take advantage of remote forests and lack of law enforcement.

 

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Didier Devers
Chief of Party – USAID Guatemala
gro.y1713961364nffr@1713961364sreve1713961364dd1713961364

Didier has been coordinating the USAID-funded B’atz project since joining Rainforest Foundation US in April 2022. He holds a Master’s in Applied Anthropology and a Bachelor’s in Geography. Before joining the organization, Didier worked for 12 years in Central and South America on issues of transparency, legality, governance, and managing stakeholders’ processes in the environmental sector. Prior to that he worked on similar issues in Central Africa. He speaks French, Spanish, and English, and is based in Guatemala.