Ecuador:
Uprising in demand of a country free from
large-scale mining
The Ecuadorian communities affected
by mining convened a Mining Uprising to take place on 5 June,
World Environmental Day. Different points of resistance were established
covering the national geography in Imbabura, Quito, Chimborazo,
Cañar, Azuay, El Oro, Zamora and Morona. Although the protest
was peaceful, law enforcement agents repressed the communities
protesting during the first days, particular in Tarqui, Victoria
del Portete, Molleturo and San Carlos-Balao, causing the indignation
of the population over the police’s brutal and arbitrary treatment.
Investigations and sanctions regarding their responsibility are
being demanded.
At all events, the Uprising was a success
as it mobilized thousands of people affected by the mega mining
projects in the most conflictive locations of the country. This
strengthened the decision of the communities and organizations
established as a National Coordination Committee for the Defence
of Life and Sovereignty, to continue struggling until they attain
the objectives set out in their plan of action and to obtain the
declaration of Ecuador as a “country free of large-scale mining.”
Furthermore, the efforts deployed by the communities served to
place the mining problem on the national and international agenda.
One of the greatest concerns of the
communities resisting mining activities in the country is the
lack of political decision by the Government to respect and ensure
respect for the Constitution and the collective interests of the
Ecuadorian people vis-à-vis the terrible threat hanging over the
lives of the affected communities, with the omnipresence of transnational
mining companies and their imminent activities in some of the
cases. On taking up a stand against mining, the communities are
defending their rights, their water, their forests and a healthy
environment for future generations. For their part, mining companies
have relied on public law enforcement agents or on their own security
bodies and on a maze of the so-called “community public relations
officers” harassing and intimidating community leaders, creating
a permanent state of insecurity and violence (see Bulletin
No. 118).
In the Amazon province of Zamora, the
Yantzaza canton is totally covered by mining concessions. This
area with a rich and diverse flora and fauna, unique in the world,
still has dense forests that have managed to survive the attacks
of the depredatory rationale prevailing since the times of the
conquest. Zamora Chinchipe is the cradle of originating peoples,
generously hosting thousands of families from Lojas and other
provinces, displaced by deforestation and the consequent droughts
and other critical situations. The farming culture they
have developed in the fertile river basins enables them to enjoy
food self-sufficiency and provide healthy food to other parts
of the country. This province’s Network for the Defence of Nature,
Dignity and Life states: “We want the State to establish policies
that will help us to stay in our villages, living in the country
we always dreamed of, an ecological and agricultural country and
not a mining country.”
On the western slopes of the Andes,
the communities of the northeast area of Intag, in the province
of Imbabura, also defend a cloud forest, the habitat of biodiversity
unique in the world. Thanks to an alternative organizational process,
innovative in the country, the communities from this area have
developed diverse productive activities consolidating the process
against mining, which means not only the displacement of families
and communities to leave the way clear to mining, but also the
destruction of these valuable forests.
The National Coordination Committee
also stated its “decision to put pressure on the Government to
make it decide to act in favour of its people.” Mining activities
have been experiencing difficulties over the past few days following
the resignation of the Minister of Energy and Mines, Alberto Acosta.
Mr. Acosta had appeared willing to support the communities and
had been considered as a possible ally within the government in
spite of the fact that he had never taken any steps to withdraw
any of the mining concessions, one of the firm demands made by
the affected communities. It is very probable that the pressure
from the various interest groups was instrumental in the removal
of Minister Acosta this week. He will be running as candidate
for the Constitutional Assembly.
With or without an allied Minister,
the anti-mining struggle continues, convening all sectors of society
to take an active part in the Uprising that aims to continue at
the end of June, to halt the invasion of foreign transnational
companies intending to plunder minerals from the ground, leaving
poverty, unemployment, environmental and social pollution behind
them. The National Coordinating Committee is urging the government
to “listen to the clamour of thousands of families that are defending
their lives and their national dignity and to act urgently, annulling
the concessions, immediately suspending the activities of transnational
mining companies throughout the country and requiring them to
abandon our communities.”
In anticipation of the Constitutional
Assembly, other measures proposed by the resisting communities
include, among others, declaring the whole Amazon region and the
springs and banks of rivers as intangible ecological reserves,
to remain untouched by private commercial extracting and exploitation
interests. That ground and surface water cannot be subject to
any type of privatization. Nationalization of natural resources
and their use according to ecological, social, cultural and ancestral
characteristics of the peoples and communities. Immediate compensation
for the psychological and social damage caused to the communities
by mining activities. A regulatory framework to improve artisan
mining practices, guarantees for farmers regarding their possession
of the surface and subsoil, guaranteeing their activities over
mining extraction, ensuring that the communities will not be displaced.
By Guadalupe Rodriguez, e-mail:
guadalupe@regenwald.org