PEDRO CAYUQUEO, Chile — The Mapuches, Chile's biggest Indigenous group, have endured centuries of battle.
They resisted conquest first by the ancient Incas, then by the Spanish. They fought as the nascent Chilean state annexed their territories and as military dictator Gen. Augusto Pinochet devastated their communities by terminating collective property, allowing for the confiscation and sale of their lands to forestry companies.
Now the Mapuches, who make up roughly 12% of Chile's 19 million people, fear a more violent chapter in their history is yet to come as the country prepares to elect its next president on Sunday in a contest expected to empower the far-right.
''It will get much worse with a far-right government,'' Mapuche political scientist Karen Rivas Catalán, 37, told The Associated Press from her lush plot of land where chickens roam. ''Our prisons will hold more Mapuches.''
The favorite to win Sunday is José Antonio Kast, an ultra-conservative former lawmaker who vows deport hundreds of thousands of immigrants without legal status and grant emergency crime-fighting powers to the military and police.
His rival, communist Jeannette Jara, who represents the governing coalition, also has adopted a law-and-order platform to woo voters.
Mapuches are in the crosshairs of a planned crackdown
A turning point for the Mapuches seemed to come in the 2019 social uprising, when Chilean protesters demanding change to the country's market-led economy adopted the Mapuche flag and breathed new life into their cause. Left-wing President Gabriel Boric came to power vowing to remove troops from their land and replace the dictatorship-era constitution with one enshrining their rights.