Chilean Police Keep Hitorangi Family Under Siege
International Alert: Chilean Police Keep Hitorangi
Family Under Siege
A strong police contingent, under the
orders of Chilean Attorney
General, has surrounded the
Hanga Roa Hotel on Easter Island and are
blocking
anyone from leaving or entering.
This siege started on 13 January 2011.
Currently there is no judge assigned to hear
the case of usurpation
which was filed by the Hotel
investors, led by Jeanette Schiess.
The Schiess are
desperate to criminally charge the Hitorangi clan and
commence evictions by 14 January.
Claims have been
made about "other offenses" but these are not
specified.
Oscar Vargas, attorney for the Hitorangi
clan, said the siege is a
result of an order made
without authority .
He denounced the Police Chief’s
order to enter the hotel, evict and
arrest every
member of the Hitorangi clan, including women and
children.
"The alleged offenses are non-violent and under
Chilean law are
punishable only by a fine," he
said.
"And in this case, by virtue of the Law of Easter
Island, the natural
owners of the disputed land cannot
be charged.
"They are trying to criminalize the Hitorangi
clan so they will be
forbidden to return to their
ancestral land.
"With this absurd measure of duress, this
a drastic infringement of
the human rights of Rapa Nui
including their right to life, by
preventing food and
substance, and to mental integrity," said
Vargas.
Surrounded by the police, the Hitorangi Clan members are in distress.
The siege is reminiscent of the tragic events of 3 and 29 December 2010.
Both parents of
two-year old twins are located inside the hotel and
are
being kept separate from their babies.
These actions came
a day after the judge on the island, Bernado Toro,
was
forced to disqualify himself under claims of corruption and
discrimination.
The deputy judge, Jacobo Hey, also
disqualified himself because of his
friendly
relationship with the Hitorangi clan.
The legal team of
Rapa Nui managed to obtain habeas corpus protection
for
the family in the Court of Appeals of Valparaiso at 12:16
A.M. on
14 January.
The violence and repression on
Rapa Nui are known throughout the
international
community, and has already drawn a statement by the UN
Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples,
James Anaya.
Marisol Hito, a spokeswoman for the Hitorangi
clan, made an urgent
appeal to the international
community to pressure the Chilean
government to stop
abuses against the people of Rapa
Nui.