00:07As a society, we need nature to live.
00:12And the Caribe is a region absolutely wonderful, rich in biodiversity, rich in different types of ecosystems.
00:21The forest is ecotropical, which is the most important and extensive region of the Caribbean region.
00:28And today in Colombia, we have less than 8%.
00:34We have lost the agricultural forest.
00:39The cause of the deterioration of these ecosystems and, above all, of the water and the land.
00:44Where are these changes?
00:46And why are these changes affecting certain communities and territories?
00:51This began from the colony, when in this region began to establish the large haciendas ganaderas.
01:01It began to tarar the dry forest.
01:04One saw the campesinos with that concern.
01:08But on the side one saw the haciendas with large haciendas, full of búfalos.
01:14So one began to tarar the islas inequidades.
01:18Some communities are much more affected than others.
01:22The 18 million hectares in tarar the cultivar.
01:26The 6% of the district of the Riego.
01:30Mexico has 40%.
01:34Argentina, Brazil.
01:37the 22% of the dirt.
01:37It is that our producers of the agroindustry, or small producers,
01:43are incredibly poor lesparated among the competencies of the rest of the world.
01:49We have to be in a society much more critical, much more critical,
01:56because we have to revert these circumstances.
02:01It is the human right to food and adequate nutrition.
02:05When a person has physical and economic access to food,
02:12in that sense, in Colombia,
02:15there is a number of municipalities
02:19where there is a greater panorama of food,
02:25and there is a number of food,
02:25which correspond to the Department of the Caribbean region.
02:29We connect from our methodology
02:31of knowledge and rights schools,
02:32which is throughout the Caribbean,
02:34we connect that the farmers,
02:38the Afro-Campers of the Montes de María
02:40can take seeds in their struggle
02:43for the return to the land
02:45to be able to produce.
02:47Those are a bit of the affections
02:48that we see in the case of San Andrés.
02:51The San Andrés Sanos
02:54suffer from the exploitation of their territory
02:56in which they do not participate.
02:59And that has to have the ability
03:02of the economy itself,
03:04of the production of their resources.
03:08They have to say,
03:09Profes, here we do not want to study more
03:11because the bachillerato,
03:14pesquero, agro,
03:15that is not an option for us.
03:17We do not have access to that.
03:19We, as the farmers,
03:21we have to adapt to that change
03:25and those decisions
03:27that we take,
03:28we take the people
03:29who have the power to do it.
03:32Without taking into account
03:34that there is a community,
03:36today we only have
03:38a hundred hundred hectares
03:39of Cienega,
03:41of water,
03:41we adapt to that
03:44impact
03:44of the ecosystem
03:46and we conform
03:48in organizations,
03:49a tool
03:50that we, as a community,
03:53we have learned
03:54to take
03:54to initiate
03:56what we previously did not do,
03:58which is how we do
03:59in this area.
03:59The regional dialogue
04:00and judicial dialogue
04:01I think is important
04:03because it allows
04:04to see
04:04the different paths
04:05and the different paths
04:08are not conflictive,
04:09they are complementary
04:10and strengthen
04:11from the differences
04:13to strengthen
04:15that transformation.
04:16Everything that flows
04:17around
04:18love a land
04:20that definitely
04:21smells
04:22to hope
04:23like the Caribbean
04:25Colombian.
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