El Ciudadano
Original article: Comunidades de Chiloé persisten en la resistencia tras violento operativo policial
In Púlpito, residents report psychological trauma and state abandonment regarding their land demands.
One week after the violent raid that shook Cuyulhue in Púlpito on March 25, the Mapuche-Williche communities of Chiloé continue to assert their resistance and make their grievances known. The operation involved 300 police officers mobilized in the early morning, and since then, it has not been able to quell the territorial claims of a sector organizing to confront the social and economic consequences of the arrests. While some community members remain under precautionary measures, leaders emphasize that their demand for the restitution of ancestral lands persists despite police pressure.
Juan Carlos Luna, leader and Werkén of the Cuenca Lago Huillinco-Cucao territorial table, told El Ciudadano that the intervention felt like an armed invasion. “It was a raid filled with violence, with weapons pointed at us while we all slept,” he highlighted, emphasizing that the trauma impacted both children and women who witnessed the detained being subdued with guns to their chests. According to Luna, the deployment was disproportionate for a humble community that makes a living through daily work in the forest and is now distraught over the force used by the state.
For leaders like the Werkén, the current conflict is a direct result of public policies that have ignored their land requests since 2000. The leader explained that although the state returned a minimal fraction of the requested territory, around 10%, the lack of a real solution drives families into precarious subsistence that is later criminalized. “These are people who earn their daily bread to survive,” Luna pointed out, criticizing that they are accused of serious crimes such as money laundering when they are merely advocating for the recovery of the space that historically belongs to them.
The economic situation following the operation is critical, as the police confiscated the community’s basic work tools. Trucks, chainsaws, and sawmill equipment, essential for the forestry work that sustains families, were removed by the officers, leaving many families vulnerable. “The people who used to bring food to the table are detained,” warned the leader, stressing that the social and psychological damage is immense for those who now must face judicial processes.
Currently, the communities of Chiloé are engaged in an ongoing process of meeting and coordinating to define their next steps in this complex scenario. It is not just about the legal defense of more than 20 accused individuals, but a collective response against what they consider an unprecedented act of state violence on the island. Leaders assure that the community’s morale remains intact.
The spokespersons call for national solidarity and attention to what is occurring in the rural areas of Chonchi. They assert that they will continue to communicate and unite forces with other organizations in Chiloé to confront this unfortunate episode. Their persistence in mobilization, alongside the demand for the freedom of their companions, seeks to end a model that prioritizes private interests over the rights of indigenous peoples, reaffirming that land and dignity cannot be negotiated in the face of force.
La entrada Chiloé Communities Stand Firm in Resistance Following Violent Police Operation se publicó primero en El Ciudadano.
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