Photos courtesy Jonathan McIntosh/Rainforest Action Network

Emergildo Criollo, a leader of the Cofan people from the Oriente region of Ecuador, stood on Happy Valley Road, where Chevron CEO John Watson lives, in Lafayette, Calif. He traveled to California to demand that the oil giant “… take responsibility for their actions and clean up our rivers and forests – our homes.”

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Indigenous leader confronts Chevron

By Rick Kearns, Today correspondent

Emergildo Criollo traveled to California recently from his indigenous village in Ecuador to the home of Chevron’s new CEO John Watson and then to a meeting with state lawmakers, demanding that the oil giant Chevron “… take responsibility for their actions and clean up our rivers and forests – our homes.”

Criollo, a leader of the Cofan people from the Oriente region of Ecuador, grew up in one of the areas where Chevron (then Texaco) was drilling and has been the subject of a massive lawsuit. He came to Chevron’s base of operations to say that the contamination killed two of his sons, along with many other Ecuadorians, and caused his wife to contract uterine cancer.

“I want to say to our indigenous brothers in the U.S. that we, the indigenous people of Ecuador need support to get Chevron to clean up the Amazon,” Criollo said. “We need your support to push this new CEO to take action.

“The contamination still exists. The rainforest is sacred, and part of it is our pharmacy which has been destroyed.”

The March visit coincides with another round of legal actions taken on behalf of 30,000 Ecuadorians, many of them indigenous, who are suing Chevron, accusing the company of dumping billions of gallons of wastewater from oil operations into the rainforest and abandoning nearly 1,000 open, unlined pits containing crude oil and toxic waste. The plaintiffs in the lawsuit assert that the contamination has caused tens of thousands of cases of cancer, miscarriages, birth defects and other illnesses.

Recent press reports are predicting that a decision in the case, now in an Ecuadorian court, could come as early as this summer and that Chevron could be ordered to pay as much as $27 billion to the plaintiffs.

Emergildo Criollo, (center) a leader of the Cofan people from the Oriente region of Ecuador, walked up Happy Valley Road in Lafayette, Calif. on his way to deliver a petition signed by 325,000 people to Chevron CEO John Watson.

“It is time for Chevron to listen to Emergildo, the 30,000 Ecuadorians who are suffering and dying because of Chevron’s policies, and the 325,000 plus people from around the globe who believe that energy shouldn’t cost lives,” said Maria Ramos, Change Chevron Campaign director at Rainforest Action Network, who accompanied Criollo on the visit to the Watson home in Lafayette, Calif.

As part of his effort to publicize the issue, Criollo and a group of U.S.-based activists went first to the home of Watson March 2, and then to company headquarters later in the afternoon and on to Sacramento the following day. Criollo’s hosts included Amazon Watch, Rainforest Action Network and Avaaz.org.

Watson did not answer when the group pressed the buzzer to his gated home, according to Han Shan, coordinator of Amazon Watch’s Cleanup Ecuador campaign. Shan noted that Criollo did read his message into Watson’s speaker at the gate, and then left a copy of a petition signed by 325,000 people from around the world, asking Chevron to clean up the affected area.

The event March 3 however, entitled “From Ecuador to California: California’s largest corporation, one of the world’s worst oil related disasters, and what California’s legislators can do” was more successful according to Brianna Cayo Cotter of RAN.

The reception with senators, Assembly members, and their staff included Democratic California Sens. Fran Pavley and Loni Hancocki, as well as Assemblyman Manny Perez, Assemblyman Paul Fong, Assemblyman Ira Ruskin and Assemblyman Jared Huffman.

“These key leaders from both the environmental and Latino caucuses not only listened to Emergildo’s story, but spoke of their desire to support the people of Ecuador who are suffering and dying because of Chevron’s operations,” Cayo Cotter said in a press release.

Huffman spoke of the need “to remedy a very serious environmental and human tragedy.”

Cayo Cotter wrote that Criollo “… told the lawmakers about how he was only 6 years old when Chevron (then Texaco) began oil drilling in his community. He spoke of how his family was forced to relocate because of the contamination. About how he had to part centimeters of oil off of the river to drink the water. About how he has lost two sons and nursed a wife through uterine cancer because of the contamination. His family drank, bathed, and fished in water that was poisoned by oil dumping.”

At the end of his presentation Criollo asked all of the Assembly members and senators for their help and invited them to visit his home and “see for themselves the devastation Chevron’s behavior has caused.”

Hancock, from the Contra Costa district where Chevron is headquartered, said she “would like to come and visit. This is an international issue and an issue here as well.”

Other lawmakers expressed interest in supporting the cleanup effort, according to Cayo Cotter.

Soon after the Sacramento reception Criollo returned to Ecuador, where, he noted that his people were also receiving help from small local indigenous organizations.

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florette said on Friday, Apr 16 at 8:36 PM

Boycott Chevron!

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Thomas Hubbard said on Saturday, Mar 27 at 1:21 AM

The capitalists are destroying this planet. They seem determined to lay waste everywhere. They lie and steal and can never be trusted. They are willing to murder you for whatever they want.

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Candace Colbert Odom said on Friday, Mar 26 at 6:54 PM

There is a lawsuit going-on, as we speak, in Oklahoma over the pollution of the Illinois River Watershed against the big-money Poultry Corporations like Tyson and Cargill. The chicken farms have dumped tons of chicken waste into the rivers and the water we canoed down as kids got murkier and murkier from all the chicken waste. Hopefully, the Judge Frizzell will side with the State of Oklahoma and make the Poultry Farms clean up the pollution...

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T.Johnston said on Thursday, Mar 25 at 11:37 AM

Keep up the fight and don't ever buy Chevron products. They only ever seem to care about money, so don't give it to them.

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June Higgins said on Thursday, Mar 25 at 4:01 AM

Chevron, please take responsibility for your actions. Take a good hard look at what you have done to these people and the rain forest. When you sit in your mansion, do you look in the mirror and feel proud of your accomplishments? I'm sure that there is a special place for you at the end of this life. Maybe you can correct it now.

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viola said on Monday, Mar 22 at 5:10 AM

horribly sad!!

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Deanna S Gordinier said on Monday, Mar 22 at 2:00 AM

This is to our indigenous American Indians. I am not, but have always carried pain in my heart for the loss of land you experienced at the founding of the USA. Now we have a President who wants more of your land. I will stand where ever you want me too to help prevent such an injustice. Fight, Fight Fight!

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Feather Flight said on Sunday, Mar 21 at 10:18 PM

how can i get consent ---- Bless your heart. A petition would rally awareness here to the north. Care2.com has a petition site, and people send in their causes. That makes me think there's no consent needed to start a petition. Best wishes for your kindness. You are what is right with this world - ya' know. Miigwetch!

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how can i get consent said on Saturday, Mar 20 at 11:09 AM

to have a petition signed by the idigenous people of america?? do i have to get consent first?? i think it would really show a lot if a lot of us natives would get petitions signed to show we truly care and want the clean up asap because we don't want the rain forest people to go what we already went through

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Mim said on Saturday, Mar 20 at 3:57 AM

Emergildo, I am so sorry for the terrible loss of your loved ones, the sickness of your wife and the destruction of your beautiful forests and waters. May something real be done about this and may this world finally turn its back on dirty oil.

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Feather Flight said on Friday, Mar 19 at 11:16 PM

Chi Miigwetch!

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Dusty otero said on Friday, Mar 19 at 9:52 PM

I am here in San Juan Capistrano California and am Native American and have seen the concrete flood controls that destroyed our rivers and Streams..I know that has to be done when we build so much..but Please keep our rivers clean too.

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Anonymous said on Thursday, Mar 18 at 7:28 PM

Hermano Emergildo Criollo, te habla un hermano de la comunidad indigena Chaupe se encuentra en la Region de Ancash - Perù mi nombre es Victor Hugo Paz Alvarez o hermano Ichu. comprendo todo lo que esta pasando en tu territorio, en tu pueblo, pase lo mismo hermano, con mi corazon te digo que estoy en tu lado por una lucha justa y humana, si puedo hacer algo por ti yo y mi pueblo estaremos contigo. no podemos permitir que la ignorancia del hombre continue arruinando la naturaleza y la casa de los verdaderos propietarios de ese territorio que son ustedes. yo estoy con ustedes y si tengo que venir asi no tenga platita ya vere como hago para estar contigo hermano Emergildo.

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CRAMAN said on Thursday, Mar 18 at 5:53 AM

Bonjour, Je viens de lire votre article, encore une infos qui confirme la marche de ce monde ! Les profits avant les hommes, aucun respect pour la nature, quelle défience ! Nous allons malheureusement tous le payer ! Vous avez donc tout mon soutien et mes encouragements pour l'ensemble de vos luttes ! Merci. Craman Florence.

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Anonymous said on Thursday, Mar 18 at 1:30 AM

easy money easy money

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native said on Wednesday, Mar 17 at 3:45 PM

Narf lawyers with historical facts for over 500 years,presenting their case before the world court,an american influence strong there,and through large investures.their the narf lawyers presenting their case for indigenous human rights and hopefully their independence .and then possibly proceeding to the u n assemblage in the u s or where there are attentive interests in life of the indigenous tribes.americans and non american,corporate,bussiness interests are secretly attempting to counter their attempt.and following their every move.be alert and vigilant.

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Gigassuinu said on Wednesday, Mar 17 at 2:34 PM

We too should demand the oil companies fix Louisiana's coast which they were and are instumental in destroying. Go for it Emergildo !

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Onzaam said on Wednesday, Mar 17 at 1:40 PM

Our thoughts and prayers go out to our southern relations. We stand in solidarity with you all.

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Candace Colbert Odom said on Monday, Mar 15 at 6:57 PM

This is the real "Avatar" movie playing out in todays world... Everyone will suffer if the Rainforest is depleted and desecrated because many of the drugs which fight everything from cancer to other ailments are found in the forests. Please clean-up the Rainforests before it is tragically, gone!

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