Interview with Ricardo
Patiño, Ecuadoran
Minister of Foreign Relations
Chevron-Texaco’s criminal behavior
is undeniable
• The minister addresses the
current situation and perspectives for the Community
of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) and
the progress of Ecuador’s Citizens’ Revolution
Pedro de la Hoz & Roberto Chile
(photos), Special correspondents
QUITO.— "We are not showing the
world the ecological disaster caused by the oil
company Chevron’s activity in northeast Ecuador
thinking only in ourselves, but in many other
peoples, as well, who suffer the predatory impact of
transnationals and their refusal to repair the
damage."

A
mural within the Foreign Ministry
denouncing Chevron-Texaco’s disdain for
nature and the people of Amazonia. |
This comment by Ricardo Patiño,
Ecuadoran Minister of Foreign Relations and Human
Mobility, summarizes the scope of the campaign
entitled ‘Chevron’s dirty hands’ being undertaken
internationally by the Ecuadoran people and the
government led by Rafael Correa, to confront the
corporation’s schemes and defamation, meant to allow
their escape from serious responsibilities.
Patiño received us in the Foreign
Ministry just a few hours after our tour of the
areas where Texaco operated until 1992, in the
provinces of Sucumbíos and Orellana. We verified the
scope of the disaster there on the ground - an
experience to be shared at another time. Texaco was
taken over by Chevron in 2001, thus assuming the
former’s responsibilities. Our dialogue with the
Minister began with his objective summary of the
environmental damage.
"Texaco spilled some 71 million
liters of residuals and 64 million liters of oil
over two million hectares of Ecuador’s Amazon region.
After ending its operations in the nation, it could
have repaired the damage, but did not do so.
Citizens affected by the transnational, organized
themselves in the Amazon Defense Front and decided
to file claims to obtain fair reparations. As a
reaction, the U.S. company, hemmed in by the
evidence, struck back legally and in the media, not
against the plaintiffs, but against the Ecuadoran
state," he said.
What is the current status of these
judicial processes?

Foreig Minister Ricardo Patiño in his
office. |
In 2011, after a prolonged process
of litigation, the court in Sucumbíos, a
northeastern province, ordered Chevron to pay 9.5
million dollars to the affected parties, a figure
which was doubled as a result of the transnational’s
refusal to offer a public apology. This past
November 13, the National Court of Justice upheld
the conviction and set the amount of the indemnity
at the original level.
Long before the provincial court
presented its decision, Chevron began to take action
against our state. First in 2004, the company
attempted, in a New York court, to transfer
responsibility to Petroecuador, our state oil entity,
but the judge found no merit in their complaint.
Then in 2006, they initiated an
international procedure in the The Hague Permanent
Court of Arbitration, a case which is known as
Chevron II. This body upheld the company’s claim and
ordered our state to pay Chevron 96 million dollars
for supposed violations of the Ecuador-U.S.
Bilateral Treaty on Protection of Investments.
Ecuador has submitted a petition to annul the ruling,
based on the fact that the treaty went into effect
in 1997, that is, five years after Texaco ended its
operations, and it does not have a retroactive
nature.
In 2009, they returned to The Hague
with more of the same about violations of the
Bilateral Treaty and the alleged responsibility of
Petroecuador and their release from responsibility
due to the 1998 signing of an agreement between the
government at that time and the company, to
recognize as concluded the environmental repair work
done by Texaco.
This process, known as Chevron III,
has not ended either. The Hague has not yet issued a
ruling on what it is being demanded by our state
given that the Sucumbios sentence has not been
executed, and additionally that Chevron cannot be
released from its responsibility to the citizens of
Ecuador. Our Attorney General’s Office has requested
that The Hague suspend the arbitration process. They
do not seem to understand that in Ecuador the
separation of powers is constitutionally protected
and the government cannot intervene in a decision
made by the judicial power. Moreover, they don’t
seem to understand that the claims filed against
Chevron-Texaco were not submitted by the state, but
by the citizenry.
Beyond the judicial arguments, what
is Chevron attempting in Ecuador?
That we assume responsibility for
the enormous damage to the environment and human
beings it has caused and that we pay for what they
have done. It is the height of cynicism. But the
truth is gaining ground. The criminal attitude of
Chevron-Texaco is obvious.
Does Ecuador feel supported in this
battle to reveal the truth?
We have received expressions of
solidarity from men and women of goodwill from
different parts of the world. Some 30 committees
supporting our cause have been formed in Latin
America, the Caribbean and Europe. Prestigious
artists have verified the seriousness of the
environmental damage in the affected areas, such as
the U.S actor Danny Glover and the Spanish singer-songwriter
Luis Eduardo Aute. The parliaments of Brazil, the
Dominican Republic and ALBA countries have made
statements.
You mention support from countries
in the region. Do you consider this a sign of the
changes which have been developing in this part of
the world?
We are much more independent and a
demonstration of this can be seen in mechanisms of
regional coordination. We have taken a very
important step with the creation of the Community of
Latin American and Caribbean States, CELAC. Cuba’s
current pro tempore presidency is highly symbolic,
doing this country and people justice makes us
proud. But beyond the symbolic value, Cuba has
played an exemplary role in the construction of this
body, facilitating dialogue and recognition of CELAC
by other blocs and countries around the world. After
Cuba, in 2014, Costa Rica will assume the presidency
and in 2015 it will be Ecuador.
What do you see as the future of
CELAC?
It is a custom-fit organization for
our peoples and our times. Take for example what is
happening in the OAS. [Organization of American
States] In recent votes, the difference between the
United States and Canada, on one side, and ourselves
on the other, is increasingly evident. We are moving
toward a scenario in which CELAC will be the
reflection of the greater homeland of Latin American
and Caribbean peoples.
Lastly, what is your view as to how
Ecuador’s diplomacy is connected to the internal
process of change underway in the country?
Our foreign policy is based on the
accomplishments and aspirations of the Citizens’
Revolution and the desire to share them, first of
all, with our sisters and brothers in the region and,
of course, the rest of the world. We can show that
it is possible to fight poverty, promote sustainable
development, protect our natural resources, move
forward with policies of inclusion and focus on the
development of human talent. With the help of Cuba
and Venezuela, we are carrying out a program of
special attention for disabled persons. But what we
are most interested in sharing is the idea that
justice and hope are possible.
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