Monday, May 26, 2008
Northwest
Mexico Showdown on Indigenous Fishing Rights
Frontera
NorteSur
A long-running dispute over indigenous fishing rights
in the Gulf of California, or Sea of Cortez, has flared up again. Armed Mexican marines and federal police helped environmental
and legal authorities confiscate 9 tons of gulf corvina from a Cucapah fishing community last week.
"We're surrounded
by federal police and soldiers as if we were delinquents," said Cucapah leader Hilda Hurtado. "The federal government's action
is very denigrating. It's very bad. We are indigenous and fisherwomen who work from March to May in order to live the entire
year."
Bernabe Esquer, the Baja California state delegate for Mexico's Attorney General for Environmental Protection,
said that the confiscated fish, which amounted to three days' harvest, were caught without the proper permits.
A ban
on snagging corvina is in effect from the beginning of May to the end of August in order to protect the species during reproduction
season and prevent its extinction, Esquer said. In 1993, the upper portion of the Gulf of California and Colorado River Delta,
where the Cucapah-federal conflict is underway, was declared a protected federal biosphere subject to fishing restrictions.
Esquer added that his agency, supported by the Mexican navy, will begin patrolling the upper Gulf of California and San Felipe
area to enforce the fishing ban beginning next week.
Non-indigenous fishermen tipped off federal authorities that Cucapahs
were allegedly harvesting fish in violation of the summer ban last week. "We respect it, but they do not…," said Carlos
Tirado, spokesman for fishermen from the community of Santa Clara. Tirado said that he did not understand why the Cucapahs
were not respecting a federal law designed to protect a marine species.
Cucapah leaders and legal representatives maintained
that current federal regulations ignore centuries of indigenous traditions and uses. Alejandra Navarro, a researcher with
the Autonomous University of Baja California, contended that Mexico's federal government has not delivered scientific studies
solicited by the Cucapah group that would prove the need for the fishing restrictions.
"What do they want us to do
in order to survive?" Hurtado said. "This is honorable work, and we are proud to be indigenous people and fisherwomen. Maybe
there are few of us Cucapahs, and we do not generate a lot of votes, but the government has gone too far and we don't know
what is going to happen."
An estimated 150 Cucapah families depend on fishing in the Gulf of California and Colorado
River Delta. Almost two years ago, the indigenous-federal conflict drew some international attention. Garnering the
backing of the Zapatista-inspired “Other Campaign,” Subcomandante Marcos visited the Cucapah to show his support
of their cause.
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Additional
Sources: Lacronica.com, May 19 and 21, 2008. Articles by Alberto Montes and editorial staff. La Prensa (San Luis Rio Colorado),
May 19, 2008. Article by Geovana Ruano Fonseca. La Jornada, May 18, 2008. Article by Antonio Heras.
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Frontera NorteSur (FNS)
Center for Latin American and Border Studies
New Mexico State University
Las Cruces, New
Mexico
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Reprinted
with authorization from Frontera NorteSur, a free, on-line, U.S.-Mexico border news source.
Translation FNS