New Internationalist

THE FRACKED EARTH

In the early hours of one Monday this February, 50 Mapuche women, men and children of the Fvta Xayem community assembled – some on horseback, others on foot – to blockade the entrances to a fracking site in Vaca Muerta, western Argentina.

Standing in the dust by the barbedwire gates of the Loma Campana fracking installations, they held aloft the red, green and blue flag of the indigenous Mapuche people, and vowed to stop the operations oil and gas company YPF carries out on their land without consultation.

Loma Campana, run jointly by the Argentine state-owned YPF and the US multinational Chevron, is the flagship fracking site in Vaca Muerta (‘Dead Cow’), close to the town of Añelo, which has become the epicentre

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from New Internationalist

New Internationalist1 min readGender Studies
Every Body
written and directed by Julie Cohen 92 minutes This sensitive, revealing and purposeful doc traces the US practice of surgically assigning exclusively male or female gender to intersex children. That is, babies who were born with characteristics of b
New Internationalist2 min read
Praiseworthy
by Alexis Wright (And Other Stories, ISBN 9781913505929) andotherstories.org Aboriginal Sovereignty, 17 years old, walks into the sea to end it all. His father, Cause Man Steel, is too busy planning his fortune as the proprietor of a sustainable donk
New Internationalist3 min read
Uruguay
Wedged between two regional giants, Uruguay has had little choice but to assert itself through the beautiful game. After hosting the inaugural football World Cup in 1930 and beating its western neighbour Argentina in the final, ‘La Celeste’ repeated

Related