To Raise Awareness, Some Colombian Birders Won鈥檛 Participate in Global Big Day

Amid social unrest and widespread human rights violations, birding groups are planning a boycott. The decision has spurred controversy.
Liliana Marcela Ospina Sanchez and Juan Carlos Rubiano Reyes. Ra铆ces Profundas Turismo Ecol贸gico y Cultural

It was pouring rain in Bogot谩, Colombia, last Monday when Liliana Marcela Ospina Sanchez first thought about protesting this year鈥檚 Global Big Day, when birders across the world tally their sightings on the eBird platform. Ospina, a business owner and ecotourism guide, was through social media. The hashtag #SOSColombia was trending. 

Since April 28, local NGOs and citizens have used social media to document widespread police violence during a national strike. Tens of thousands of people took to the street to demonstrate against a controversial tax reform bill that opponents said would disproportionately affect the poorest people in a country whose economy has been decimated by COVID-19. The tax reform that sparked the demonstrations was , but the demonstrations continued, as the country faces high unemployment and poverty rates due to the pandemic.

Ospina thought about the people protesting in the rain just outside her home. At the same time, she says, 鈥淚 was seeing these posts like 鈥楲et鈥檚 go birding on Saturday for the Global Big Day!鈥 鈥楲et鈥檚 be number one again!鈥 That鈥檚 when the conflict inside me started.鈥 

more than 50,000 people from 175 countries took part in the Global Big Day. Since 2016, Colombia, the most biodiverse country in the world per square mile, has been the , with participants recording in one day.

This year, vying for the international bragging rights amid so much turmoil felt wrong. On Tuesday, Sanchez and her husband and business partner, Juan Carlos Rubiano Reyes, took a stand in solidarity with the protesters. Citing the current pain of the country鈥檚 鈥渇orests, birds, environmental leaders, peasants, and people,鈥 they announced in a  on the page of their ecotourism company, Ra铆ces Profundas Turismo Ecol贸gico y Cultural, that they would not participate in this year鈥檚 Global Big Day on May 8. 

The decision sparked heated conversations among Colombia鈥檚 birding community and inspired others to take action, too. By Wednesday,, two, local bird groups throughout the country, and hundreds of individual birders had joined the boycott. In an  on the Facebook page of the Red Nacional de Observadores de Aves (RNOA), the biggest network of birdwatchers in the country, 130 people said they also would not participate in this year鈥檚 Global Big Day. In contrast, 11 said they would, and five said they would go birding but wouldn鈥檛 upload lists to eBird.  

Those boycotting hope that their absence will raise awareness among the international birding community about the critical situation in their country. The goal, as birder and biologist Jeancarlo S谩nchez puts it, is 鈥渢hat the eyes of the entire birding world suddenly sees that Colombia is not there. That we鈥檙e missing, that we鈥檙e not in the first places in the ranking and that they wonder why.鈥

Before the national strike, the pandemic had birders already wondering if they could safely engage in this year鈥檚 activities. The country is enduring its third COVID-19 wave, with ICU occupancy at in some regions, and  of the population has been fully vaccinated. After protesters blocked highways and the violence escalated, it became even more uncertain that people could safely go birding on May 8, says Felipe Estela, who had coordinated the Global Big Day in Valle del Cauca, southern Colombia, and decided to join the boycott last Wednesday. The violence in Cali, his hometown, has been terrifying in recent days. 鈥淲e hear bullets, bombs. I鈥檝e never, ever experienced anything like this,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a situation of permanent angst.鈥

Still, many have decided to take a stand: 鈥淲e can鈥檛 celebrate bird鈥檚 day in a country that鈥檚 cutting our wings,鈥 says birder Julian 脕vila-Campos. In nine days of protest, , including s like 19-year-old Santiago Andr茅s Murillo, and 22-year-old Nicol谩s Guerrero. Their deaths have become the worst examples of the widespread violence in the country. Some  as many as 1,773 claims of police violence episodes, including 11 cases of sexual violence.

Some boycotters, like biologist Mar铆a Paula Camelo, hope their absence will also call attention to assassinations of environmental leaders in Colombia, the country in the world for environmental activists. Earlier this year, Gonzalo Cardona, a beloved birder who dedicated his life to protect the ecosystems where Yellow-eared Parrots live, was assassinated for his environmental work. If every bird counts, Camelo says, that is because a birder has counted it. 鈥淓very dead birder should count, too,鈥 she points out.

Support for the Global Big Day boycott is far from unanimous. Some feel that it politicizes birding, which should remain a 鈥渘eutral space,鈥 as the RNOA wrote in a statement. The RNOA erased posts about the boycott, but later apologized and made a call to respect everyone鈥檚 opinion. (It did not republish the deleted posts.) Some groups like the Sociedad Antioque帽a de Ornitolog铆a (SAO) started to ban birders who mentioned the topic from WhatsApp or Facebook groups. One of the birders, Angela Caguazango, says that this practice is 鈥渦nacceptable, especially in a country where censorship has sparked so much violence.鈥 SAO declined to comment for this story.

Before the national strike erupted, the birding community planned to honor Cardona鈥檚 memory during Global Big Day. Many plan to participate in part to keep that promise. Others, like Jorge Mu帽oz, director of the Asociaci贸n Ornitol贸gica de Caquet谩, are aware that taking a top spot in the Global Big Day could help bring much-needed funding and support to local ecotourism initiatives. The region where Mu帽oz works was heavily ravaged during the worst days of Colombia鈥檚 civil war, and ecotourism is slowly becoming a financial alternative for peasants and former members of the FARC guerilla trying to reintegrate into civilian life. It would be unfair to abandon them, he says. Rural communities have been preparing for the event for months. 

Ospina, who inadvertently started the protest, says she only intended to use the tactic of silence during Global Big Day to bring attention to the country鈥檚 situation. She鈥檚 inviting everyone to upload photos, songs, drawings, poems, or any art form to social media to showcase that without people defending and taking care of the land, there鈥檚 no No. 1 for Colombia. 鈥淲e want to be recognized because of our birds,鈥 she says, 鈥渂ut without ignoring the reality that we have here.鈥