A/HRC/4/32/Add.2
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32.
The Ecuadorian Government is concerned by the effects of these practices on the
indigenous border population and has begun bilateral negotiations with the Colombian
Government. As a result, Colombia announced that it would suspend spraying, but this has
not definitively ended the controversy. Ecuador has requested a complete halt to spraying in a
10-kilometre strip along the border. Although technical studies on the environmental impact of
spraying glysophate have provided various results, the Special Rapporteur has received
testimony from members of affected communities which clearly indicates that, in the long term,
the effects of such practices are considerable.
33.
An international study undertaken in March 2006 concludes: “a thoroughgoing
investigation must urgently be launched into the situation affecting the Awá indigenous people,
which is linked to the consequences of spraying, and to their abandonment by the State”. The
Awá request “a study to ascertain the effects of these spraying exercises, sufficient support for
indigenous health, the creation of a health department for the Awá people, the denunciation of
the land invasion, eviction and paramilitary threats made under the auspices of Plan Colombia
and which affect Colombian and now Ecuadorian indigenous Awás, and the conduct of
continuous immunization campaigns”.
34.
In 2004, a United Nations inter-agency mission was sent to study the problems affecting
indigenous and non-indigenous populations on both sides of the border, leading to the
preparation of a report for the Government of Ecuador. In 2005, on the basis of this report, the
United Nations established an inter-agency programme for peace and development on the
northern border, in order to provide a coordinated framework for action in both countries.
In 2006, at the request of the Ecuadorian Government, a United Nations technical mission
examined the issue of glysophate spraying. This report was sent to the Government of
Colombia. According to the latest information, Colombia has ceased spraying within a
10-kilometre strip along the Ecuadorian border.
35.
Drug trafficking has eroded the growing of environmentally friendly crops by introducing
coca farming as an illicit survival strategy, i.e., traditional crops are giving way to the small-scale
cultivation of coca. The number of refugees from conflict zones in Colombia has increased.
According to testimony received, the presence of soldiers, guerrillas and drug traffickers in the
area bordering Colombia has had a negative impact on the living conditions of indigenous border
peoples. Acts of violence and harassment, particularly against women, are reported. The sexual
exploitation of women, young girls and teenagers, and trafficking in persons has increased
alarmingly. The number of indigenous Ecuadorian farmers, including minors, carrying out illicit
planting on the Colombian side of the border has risen.
36.
According to reports, the expansion of oil palm companies has progressively
dispossessed communities of their ancestral territories. One study shows that these companies
currently own 60,000 hectares, of which 30,000 are under crops, and there are plans to acquire in
total 150,000 hectares, using loans from Brazil. The conflict in the zone specifically affects
women and girls from communities living in areas directly and indirectly influenced by the
northern border conflict.