They’ve gone dark: Afghans who helped the U.S. military, trained as American-style journalists and rode the wave of women heading to higher education are destroying the diplomas, transcripts and résumés that prove how they built civil society in the country that the U.S. has left behind.
Amazon leader calls on Peru to investigate forest activists’ murder
By Bethany Ao, GSS correspondent
PARIS — [Editor’s note: GSS news editor Bethany Ao is attending COY11 in Paris, where she met Diana Ríos, a leader of the Asheninka people in Peru. In September 2014, four activists in Pullcalpa, in Peru’s Ucayali province, were ambushed and brutally executed while walking home from a community meeting. Three men have been charged but three more suspects are believed to be at large.
Among the activists killed was Ríos‘ father, Jorge Ríos Pérez, who was fighting for legal title to the Asheninka’s lands in order to prevent illegal logging in the Amazon. Diana Ríos, who had a daughter with Edwin Chota, another one of the killed activists, was forced into hiding.

But she and other activists continued to fight, and on Aug. 18 Peru granted the Asheninka people title to almost 200,000 acres of their ancestral land. It was the culmination of a 10-year fight to protect the Amazon.
The massive forests of the Amazon are considered a key to solving climate change, with an estimated 17 billion tons of above-ground carbon, more than three times as much carbon as the U.S. emits in a year.
As indigenous people whose lives depend on the land, the Asheninka and other indigenous people say they are best able to preserve these forests.
Read on for Ao’s live tweets of Ríos’ address to COY today.]
Now live tweeting Diana Rios’ talk at #COY11 on the violence indigenous people face in Peru & climate change! #GSS_COY11
— GSS (@GSSVoices) November 27, 2015
For some background, her father was killed by illegal loggers, and she is now a leader of the Asheninka people. #GSS_COY11
Diana Rios beginning her talk at #COY11 #GSS_COY11 pic.twitter.com/gqxp2JTYfL — GSS (@GSSVoices) November 27, 2015
“In spite of the deaths in 2014, we will continue to fight for the forests and this territory.” – Diana Rios #GSS_COY11
— GSS (@GSSVoices) November 27, 2015
“We had to keep fighting in 2015 to finally get our land title. We kept at it. It was not easy and it cost 4 lives.” – Diana Rios #GSS_COY11 — GSS (@GSSVoices) November 27, 2015
“We have the land title, but the threats continue.” – Diana Rios #GSS_COY11
— GSS (@GSSVoices) November 27, 2015
Indigenous people in Peru have a much harder time getting their land rights recognized by the gov’t than miners getting permits #GSS_COY11 — GSS (@GSSVoices) November 27, 2015
Only 50 land grants were given to indigenous peoples. There is so much more territory under concession for mining, logging #GSS_COY11
— GSS (@GSSVoices) November 27, 2015
“It’s a shame because we are the ones who want to protect the forests. We want to do this for the world.” – Diana Rios, #GSS_COY11 — GSS (@GSSVoices) November 27, 2015
“They finally gave us our land title in 2015. It took the new leaders, us as women, to carry out the struggle.” – Diana Rios #GSS_COY11 — GSS (@GSSVoices) November 27, 2015
The tribe struggled for 13 yrs to get the gov’t to grant them their land title and it took the deaths in 2014 for it to finally happen.
— GSS (@GSSVoices) November 27, 2015
A solar panel was installed in 2015, first time the tribe had energy. Also had cell phone communication for the first time. #GSS_COY11 — GSS (@GSSVoices) November 27, 2015
“It is not easy to fight. Who will do it, but the indigenous? We must do it ourselves.” – Diana Rios #GSS_COY11
— GSS (@GSSVoices) November 27, 2015
“We want further development. We want the deaths of our leaders to be investigated, or we won’t feel safe.” – Diana Rios #GSS_COY11 — GSS (@GSSVoices) November 27, 2015
“I feel content. I do not feel alone. I thought that when my father was killed, I would be alone. That is not the case.” – Rios #GSS_COY11
— GSS (@GSSVoices) November 27, 2015
“It is youth who will fight for our future.” – Diana Rios #GSS_COY11 — GSS (@GSSVoices) November 27, 2015
“I will go back to my community, content & happy. I can see from the energy here that you will be the change & continue the fight.” – Rios
— GSS (@GSSVoices) November 27, 2015
“I will go back to my community, content & happy. I can see from the energy here that you will be the change & continue the fight.” – Rios — GSS (@GSSVoices) November 27, 2015
“I see the energy, I see the light here. It can be anyone here who will lead the fight for climate change in the future.” – Rios #GSS_COY11
— GSS (@GSSVoices) November 27, 2015
Diana Rios receives a standing ovation from the crowd as she leaves the stage. #GSS_COY11 — GSS (@GSSVoices) November 27, 2015
—Photos by Bethany Ao. Ao is GSS News Editor for Europe and a junior at Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism. See more of her on-the-ground reports from COY11 on Twitter @GSSVoices, #GSS_COY11 and on Facebook. Follow Ao @BethanyAo and email her atbethanyao2017@u.northwestern.edu.
