Indigenous peoples vow to bring down apartheid border wall
- Opinión
The Indigenous Peoples' Border Summit of the Americas 2007 began with a human rights delegation visit to the border and after four days of activities concluded with a vow to "bring down the wall."
Indigenous delegates to the border on Tohono O'odham Nation land took a tour of conditions along the U.S.-Mexico border here and returned in outrage.
"We saw it all firsthand in America," said Bill Means, Lakota and cofounder of the International Indian Treaty Council on Nov. 8. He is also a member of the Indigenous delegation on the border here south of Sells, Arizona, charged with the mission of documenting human rights abuses for a report to the United Nations.
The group became an eyewitness to the presence of federal agents, the hovering customs helicopter, the profiteering contractors, the federal spy towers, the "cage" detention center, and the arrest of a group of indigenous peoples—mostly women and children—by the U.S. Border Patrol on an Indian Nation.
The human rights delegation included Mohawks, Oneida, Navajo, Acoma Pueblo, Hopi, and O'odham representatives. Near the border, at the scene of the arrests, Mohawks stood before U.S. Border Patrol agents and held their fists high in solidarity, as the Border Patrol packed nearly a dozen Mexicans into one vehicle.
"We were passing some of our strength on to them to fight," said Kahentinetha Horn of the Mohawk Women Title Holders.
The delegation also visited the new federal spy tower next to Homeland Security's migrant detention center known as "the cage" on the Tohono O'odham Nation. The first stop, however, was the abomination of the new vehicle barrier wall being constructed on O'odham land.
Horn commented on the callousness of the Tohono O'odham district official who led the tour and spoke in favor of the border barrier. The delegation issued severe criticisms of Tohono O'odham officials who, in the words of Diné (Navajo) delegate Lenny Foster, "defend the policies of genocide" on the border.
The indigenous delegation documenting the abuses planned to intervene in the arrests, but the Border Patrol crowded the group into a vehicle and left quickly. "I came away feeling very frustrated and very discouraged," Kahentinetha said.
Border Summit Debate
Speaking a few hours later to the Indigenous Peoples Border Summit of the Americas II in San Xavier, Means called for solidarity of indigenous peoples throughout the world to halt the arrests of indigenous migrants walking north in search of a better life, and solidarity to bring down the U.S.-Mexico border wall.
"One inch of intrusion into our land is not acceptable!" Mohawk Mark Maracle told the Border Summit. "I became very angry when I saw those guys rounding up our people."
He added, "It is a violation of our Great Law to witness what we did today and do nothing about it."
Jay Johnson Castro of Del Rio Texas, a leader of protests against the imprisonment of migrant children at Hutto prison in Texas and the border wall in Texas, stated, "I hear 'sovereign nation,' but I didn't see a sovereign nation."
Castro said the buildings near the border on the Tohono O'odham Nation are labeled with signs, "'Homeland Security and Tohono O'odham Nation,' like they are in partnership."
Maracle said all Indian nations need to come together and stop what is happening here. "I know from past experience with the Mohawk Warrior Society where our power lies, it is with the people." He added a warning to the people of the O'odham nation: "If you don't stop and grab hold of your destiny, there is not going to be one for your children."
Chris George, Oneida from Canada, told how the Border Patrol approached the summit delegation and demanded to know who authorized them to be at the border.
"No one authorizes us to do anything. It was the Creator who took us there," George replied.
Foster, an advocate for Native ceremonial rights for inmates, said what he witnessed at the border was "brutal, vicious, and evil." He noted that Diné know that all human beings have five fingers, but that he witnessed district officials and federal agents who had no concept of the five-fingered humanity they share with the migrants. "They were robots."
While the Indigenous Border Summit was at the gate, an attorney for the O'odham in Mexico was prevented from crossing into the United States on Tohono O'odham land by the U.S. Border Patrol, even though he held a letter from Tohono O'odham Nation Chairman Ned Norris requesting him to come and meet with him on that day. Overruling Chairman Norris on Tohono O'odham land, the U.S. Border Patrol agent said the attorney must have a U.S. visa to enter, and not just a letter from Chairman Norris.
At the border wall construction at the gate, Means said one of the workers told them, "The Israelis are helping us put up the fence." Indeed, border wall contractor Boeing has subcontracted Elbit Systems, an Israeli defense contractor that participated in constructing security walls in Palestine. The lead contractor Boeing subcontracted Elbit Systems for security work on the U.S.-Mexico Secure Border Initiative. Elbit is also participating in building the wall between Israel and Palestine.
Means noted that even though the Berlin Wall had come down, now there are other walls to divide the people, including the wall between Israel and Palestine.
True Sovereignty for Indigenous Nations Remains to be Seen
After traveling to the Tohono O'odham Nation border with Mexico, an indigenous peoples' delegation from the summit unleashed a new movement to honor the lives and deaths of migrants.
Diana Joe, a Yaqui woman who worked the fields on both sides of the border as a child, said, "May the farmworker people live long!" Horn said it is time to stop "crying about all our suffering" and acting subjugated, and time to take action. "Why don't we just go out and pick those people up?" she said of the indigenous peoples walking in the desert. She urged people to start taking down the border wall.
Mike Wilson, Tohono O'odham, said it is important to dispel the myth of indigenous sovereignty in the United States. "We have no sovereignty. We only have the sovereignty that the U.S. Congress allows us that day."
Wilson said if the Tohono O'odham Nation were truly sovereign, it would not have an occupying army and unchecked police power on its land. Federal forces including the Border Patrol, National Guard, and Immigration and Customs agents patrol all parts of the tribe's territory. Wilson said children as young as six years old have been imprisoned in the unit known as "the cage" on O'odham land at San Miguel.
Wilson, a strong proponent of migrants' rights among indigenous peoples described searching for the bodies of migrants who have died on Indian lands. Since 2006, 246 migrants have died in the Tucson Border Patrol sector, where the Border Patrol's inhumane border policies are enforced.
On the Tohono O'odham Nation, 65 people perished in the desert. Wilson is now searching the desert for the remains of another five human beings.
"Where is the moral outrage?" Wilson asked. In July, Wilson found the body of a 17-year-old who was seven months pregnant.
Wilson said the Tohono O'odham Nation spent $16 million to build a new cultural center. "Not one penny was spent to prevent migrant deaths." It is time, he said, for Native people to confront the myth of sovereignty and stop acting as accomplices to attempts to hide the reality of the victims, while using their own victimization as an excuse. "It is time to emerge from silence about the women, men, children, and unborn children who die on Indian lands for want of a drink of water."
Wilson displayed a huge pile of his plastic water jugs from his water stations on O'odham land that had been slashed. He said that people talk of outside Minutemen, but these are "O'odham Minutemen," and added that the time had come for all people to become a voice for the mummified migrants found dead in the desert. "They have no voice."
Petuuche Gilbert, Acoma Pueblo from New Mexico, described the colonized thinking that the border delegation experienced on Tohono O'odham land.
Gilbert recalled the words of an Acoma Pueblo member referring to the Catholic Church. "They made slaves out of us to make this church. I guess that's why we are Catholics now."
He pointed out that the border wall is going up on Indian lands because Indian Nations are not able to block the fence "because we do not have that sovereignty over our lands, territories, and natural resources." Gilbert said that one day, Indian Nations would be sovereign nations again.
Johnson Castro denounced abuses at the Don T. Hutto Detention Center near Austin, Texas, where migrant babies and children are imprisoned, and the Raymondville migrant internment camp near Brownsville, Texas.
"Near the Texas capitol, there are hundreds of children in a prison-for-profit," Castro said of Hutto. Describing conditions before the protests began, he noted that children were kept in cells separate from their parents, wore prison uniforms, and were given expired milk to drink.
Castro recounted that a woman was sexually assaulted by a guard in front of her child. The guard was never even charged. "We don't know what happened to the mother and child," Castro said.
Homeland Security denied entry to T. Don Hutto Detention Center in Taylor, Texas, near Austin, to the United Nations' Rapporteur on migrants, Jorge Bustamante, in May. At Raymondville internment camp, a prison guard exposed the fact that migrants were being fed food with maggots in it. The United States is one of only two countries in the world, the other being Somalia, that does not legally ensure the rights of the child and has not ratified the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child.
Castro noted that the increase in detentions is part of "Operation Endgame," a U.S. policy to remove all "aliens" that is now in its fourth year.
The Border Summit ended by declaring an end to discrimination against migrants and the need for a new era of human rights. Participants renewed their determination to halt the border wall and hold the Tohono O'odham Nation responsible for the deaths of men, women, children, and unborn children who have died on O'odham lands "for want of a drink of water."
As Mohawk Mark Maracle put it, "It doesn't take a lot of people to bring down this border wall!"
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Brenda Norrell is a freelance writer and Americas Policy Program border analyst, www.americaspolicy.org. Her blog can be found at http://www.bsnorrell.blogspot.com/.
For More Information:
Indigenous Border Summit of the Americas 2007 http://indigenousbordersummitamericas2007.blogspot.com/
Source: Americas Program, Center for International Policy (CIP): americas.irc-online.org
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