El Diviso, Colombia - The Awa of Colombia are an Indigenous people who have been threatened by armed groups in the country’s southwestern rainforests for decades, but insist on protecting the environment they say they are “connected” to. As environmental policy leaders gather for a major biodiversity meeting in the South American nation, the Awas embody the struggle for survival of native peoples and the defense of the jungle. “The Awa people have been resisting for 500 years.
Against invasion, discrimination, armed groups, forced recruitment and displacement, acculturation,” said Olivio Bisbicus, one of the leaders of this community of nearly 50,000. “Being an Awa chief is complicated and dangerous,” he said. “Drug trafficking brings vice, territorial disharmony and the destruction of our culture and nature.
” The group’s full name, Inkal Awa, means “People of the jungle” in their ancestral language. They live in the mountainous rainforest of Colombia and in neighboring Ecuador. “Three armed groups are fighting over this strategic border region, a drug trafficking corridor to the Pacific” that is also dotted with illegal gold mines, Alex Javier Gonzalez, an official with the Narino governorate, told AFP.
The situation is “critical for the Awas,” he said. - ‘Risk of extinction’ - The Colombian justice system has documented 25 years of violence against the Awas, who have been caught up in the conflict with the FARC guerrilla army, warning of .