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Conquistador statue reinstallation in US state of New Mexico stopped after protests

Espanola, New Mexico, US
Reuters

A New Mexico county halted the reinstallation of a 16th-century Spanish conquistador statue on Wednesday after protests over the return of the bronze figure, removed three years ago during nationwide anti-racism demonstrations.

The northern county of Rio Arriba postponed a Thursday reinstatement ceremony after activists occupied a concrete pedestal in the city of Espanola, where the statue of Juan de Onate was set to be placed.

Protesters are reflected on a window as they stand next to a concrete platform where authorities had planned to reinstall a statue of Spanish conquistador Juan de Onate but postponed the event after demonstrators occupied the platform, at the Rio Arriba County Complex in Espanola, New Mexico, US, on 27th September, 2023

Protesters are reflected on a window as they stand next to a concrete platform where authorities had planned to reinstall a statue of Spanish conquistador Juan de Onate but postponed the event after demonstrators occupied the platform, at the Rio Arriba County Complex in Espanola, New Mexico, US, on 27th September, 2023. PICTURE: Reuters/Andrew Hay

The event is postponed until further notice “in the interest of public safety,” the county said in a statement.

Dozens of monuments to European colonisers and Confederate generals came down in 2020 during racial justice protests. The unusual move to reinstate the Onate statue drew outrage from Native Americans and others who regard him as a war criminal for ordering the massacre of Indigenous people.

“We plan to keep fighting to make sure this symbol of murder, this symbol of slavery does not go up,” said Celina Montoya Garcia, a member of the nearby Native American Ohkay Owingeh Pueblo community and a coordinator for the Coalition to Stop Violence Against Native Women.



County Commission Chairman Alex Naranjo and other local officials backed reinstatement of the statue to celebrate Hispanic heritage in a county where 71 per cent of people are Hispanic, 20 per cent Native American and many descended from both races. 

“It’s important to recognise that Don Juan de Onate led many of our families here to this valley,” said Espanola Mayor John Ramon Vigil, who supports displaying the statue.

First erected in 1994 in Alcalde just north of Espanola, the statue has long outraged those who trace Onate’s brutal 1598 colonization of New Mexico to contemporary problems ranging from gender inequality to institutional racism.

One of the statue’s feet was sawn off in 1997 by a protester to symbolise the two dozen Acoma Pueblo Native men who each had one foot amputated at the order of Onate after a battle where hundreds were killed and survivors enslaved.

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