Ecuador signed a deal to export some 3 million barrels of crude oil to China through the Petrochina company, with the Andean country to receive $1 billion as an advance payment, the statal Petroecuador announced July 23. The first payment represents 28% of the total value of the oil that Ecuador has agreed to export. Ecuador produced over 485,000 barrels of crude oil per day in May. Quito is also negotiating a $1 billion loan with China, economic minister Diego Borja said earlier this week. (Reuters, July 23)
President Rafael Correa also said July 23 that Ecuador will defy a World Bank arbitration body if it rules in favor of the Paris-based oil company Perenco in a dispute over $357 million in taxes. "We are willing to take this to its ultimate consequences with Perenco. We are not going to let these multinational companies continue to treat us like colonies," Correa told Quito-based Sonoram radio. (AP, July 23)
China's Andes Petroleum already has operations in the Ecuadoran Amazon. Correa has also broached opening the Manta air base on the Pacific to China as a shipping hub after US military forces vacate the site later this year.
Amazon indigenas protest Correa
Meanwhile, the Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities of the Ecuadorian Amazon (CONFENIAE)—composed of the Siona, Secoya, Cofán, Waorani, Shuar, Achuar, Shiwiar, Kichwa, Ando and Zápara nationalities—charging that "the prevailing arrogant and dictatorial political regime of the current Government of President Correa, violates the precepts of Constitutional Rights of the Republic, the principles of the ILO Convention 169, and the rights affirmed in the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples."
The statement further protested that "the regime of Rafael Correa is provoking political and social disorder in the Amazon Region, disregarding Ancestral Territorial Rights of Indigenous Nationalities and Peoples, by the intrusion of military forces and surrender to the national and transnational oil and mining companies of our territories, with a clear plan to [bring about] the looting, subjugation and misery of our communities." (Upside Down World, July 15)
The statement especially rejected Correa's Decree 1780 of June 25, which grants Catholic missions access to Ecuador's Amazon region, to evangelize and establish schools and radio and TV stations. (El Telégrafo, Guayaquil, July 15)
See our last posts on Ecuador and Perenco and the struggle for the Amazon.
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