The announcement of the new state (known in Spanish as la
República Glaciar) was made March 5th in a full-page ad in the New York Times
(reproduced below). As the director of
Greenpeace Chile, Matías Asún, explained, “Glacier Republic was founded because
in Chile there is a legal loophole that does not recognize these huge ice
masses as part of its sovereignty.
Neither the constitution nor the water code mentions glaciers as public goods
that need to be protected actively.
Chile is one of the few countries without a law to protect glaciers, and
that has allowed mining companies to become their main threat.” Greenpeace explains that Chile can have the
territories back when it agrees to take proper charge of them.
The Glacier Republic maintains its capital, according to
Greenpeace, in a tent erected high in the Andes Mountains in an as yet
undisclosed location, in the Patagonia region shared by Argentina and Chile
where all of South America’s glaciers lie.
It seems quite possible that the as yet unnamed capital will exceed the
current record held by La Paz, Bolivia (11,942 feet), for the national capital
at the highest altitude above sea level.
Readers can visit the Glacier Republic website and apply for
a passport. Among the first batch of
citizens is the flamboyant Chilean “anti-poet” Nicanor Parra, one of Latin
America’s most revered writers. Since
Parra is 99 years old, it is not clear if he will make the trek to visit his
new fatherland.
Nicanor Parra, age 99, is one of Glacier Republic’s first citizens. |
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