Urgent Action 008
Mexico City, May 15, 2023
It is urgent to stop illegal logging in the Sierra Tarahumara of Chihuahua due to environmental damage, forced internal displacement, murders and multiple and irreparable violations of human rights such as autonomy, self-determination, and free, prior and informed consultation. The right to live in a community according to indigenous peoples’ culture, language, community welfare of children, healing through traditional medicine and preserving their food systems. The rights to life, security and freedom from violence have also been restricted.
Indigenous peoples of the region have denounced that illegal logging intensified since 2015 and in the last 8 months it has worsened. Currently, there has yet to be a comprehensive action plan to prevent illegal logging in the forests of the Sierra Tarahumara of Chihuahua. The actions that have been taken by the municipal, state and federal governments are not enough as multiple economic and political interests are involved. In which the authorities do not have adequate control.
Since 1966, at least 22 people have been killed for defending the forest and territory. The devastation affects not only indigenous communities but also local people inhabitants, agriculture, cities and those who benefit from water from the lower parts of the Rio Grande and Pacific watersheds that supply the states of Chihuahua, Sonora and Sinaloa.
Background:
Indigenous communities in the Sierra Tarahumara have protected the forest with their lives in the face of legal and illegal logging. For more than 30 years they have been fighting and defending themselves through agrarian, civil and criminal proceedings to defend the forest,
nature, water and territory that by ancestral right belongs to them, against the commercial interests of powerful people linked to criminal groups.
Damage to nature and the water cycle is irreversible. The Sierra Tarahumara eco-region is commercially important because it generates water for the hydrological basins of southern Sonora, Sinaloa, and the Río Conchos, which supply the main agricultural areas of Chihuahua, Sonora, and Sinaloa. In addition, through the course of the Conchos River, more than 50% is contributed to the payment of the water treaty signed with the United States in 1944, and drinking and industrial water is provided to the border cities on the Mexican side on the Rio Bravo basin, in addition to the agricultural region of the Tamaulipas Valley.
Therefore, we demand:
Authorities:
Andrés Manuel López Obrador
President of Mexico
Email: [email protected]
Twitter: @lopezobrador_
Adán Augusto López Hernández
Secretary of the Interior of Mexico.
Email: [email protected]
Twitter: @adan_augusto
María Luisa Albores González
Secretary of Environment and Natural Resources.
E-mail: [email protected]
Twitter: @Mary_Luisa_AG
Blanca Alicia Mendoza Vera
Federal Attorney for Environmental Protection
Email: [email protected]
Twitter: @blancamendozav
María Eugenia Campos Galván
Governor of the State of Chihuahua
Email: [email protected]
Twitter: @MaruCampos_G
Rubén Rocha Moya
Governor of the State of Sinaloa
Email: [email protected]
Twitter: @rochamoya_
Francisco Alfonso Durazo Montaño
Governor of the State of Sonora
Email: [email protected]
Twitter: @AlfonsoDurazo
Américo Villarreal Anaya
Governor of the State of Tamaulipas
Email:
Twitter: @Dr_AVillarreal
Adriana Beatriz Carolina Reséndez Maldonado
Head of the Mexican Section of the International Boundary and Water Commission between the United States and Mexico
Email: [email protected]
Twitter: @SRE_mx @cilamexico
Humberto Molinar Hernández
Director of Forestry Development in the State of Chihuahua
Email: [email protected]
Mauro Parada Muñoz
Secretary of Rural Development for the State of Chihuahua
Email: [email protected]
Twitter: @SDRchihuahua