Ecuador:
Major
success against mining in the Intag zone
Intag, the subtropical
anti-mining area in the northwest of Ecuador will not find 26
September 2007 an easy day to forget. After months of waiting
for a resolution on the issue, the Ministry of Mines and Oil announced
suspension of mining activities of Ascendant Copper,
the Canadian mining company owner of the concessions in the area.
The legal base for Minister Galo Chiriboga’s decision is that
the company breached the law when it launched its work, because
it had not requested the corresponding authorization and reports
from the Municipality of Cotacachi.
This
decision affects 9,504 hectares and implies that the mining company
cannot carry out mining, administrative or community relations
activities. Unfortunately, the decision is not final but, according
to Minister Chiriboga, it is to be maintained until the company
renegotiates the contract and its presence in the area. Other
concessions are also under government scrutiny.
These
facts show that when grass-roots have a firm will and political
circumstances go along with it, people can succeed in defending
their sovereignty and interests. Similar decisions could
be taken regarding other mining concessions in other parts of
the country.
The
feelings of Intag communities regarding the mining project and
the presence of the company were initially pessimistic as, in
the words of Councillor Luis Robalino from Intag “this is the
fourth time that the same decision has been announced, but the
company continues in the area.” Now, following the arrival
of government officials in the area to close the company offices,
they are more optimistic.
During a
press conference called at the beginning of October to show satisfaction
over the government decision, some of the circumstances leading
to the population’s rejection of mining activity in the area and
of the mining company were recalled. According to the Mayor
of Cotacachi, the economist Auki Tituaña, together with the President
of the Community Council, Polibio Pérez and other leaders from
the area, right from the start of the company’s activities, its
purpose was to divide the communities to facilitate its entry
in the area and its expected operations.
The
presence of Ascendant Copper in the area over the past three years
involved paramilitary forces shooting peasants, using trained
dogs and tear gas. Furthermore, a hundred peasants or so were
intimidated through the filing of complaints and legal processes
that sought to silence resistance, but they were not successful.
Many of them were firmly acquitted by judges from the Province
of Imbabura. None were sentenced.
For
his part, the Mayor denounced the company’s links with “former
military forces, hired murderers, drug traffickers and corrupt
politicians.” He also stated that “they thought that with the
offer they once made of 60 or 70 million US dollars, they were
going to obtain my support, but my price is much higher, it is
the value of the mine” (according to the company manager AC, Francisco
Veintimilla, a minimum of 110 billion dollars). “But sincerely,
I prefer them to leave the trees, the fauna and flora untouched
and for them to respect the development model that we have chosen
for ourselves in Intag and Cotacachi.”
He
refers to the tropical cloud forest of immense biological value
that is located precisely over the copper mine. Since the arrival
of mining activities, “we have even managed to halt the traditional
logging that our parents’ generation was implementing,” stated
Polibio Pérez. “Nowadays we grant conservation much more value.”
Ascendant
Copper
has been in the area since 2004, although anti-mining resistance
goes back to 1997. In this period many initiatives have been consolidated
in the area, making Intag a model of alternative production: agriculture,
tourism, crafts, cooperatives, organizations and other initiatives
occupy hundreds of families in the area. Following the incidents
caused by this and other mining companies in other locations in
Ecuador, a Coordinating Office for the Defence of Life and Human
Rights has been set up.
It
is estimated that close on 95% of the inhabitants of Cotacachi,
including the authorities, are against mining (see WRM Bulletin
No. 118). “This is in defence of the interests of the State, the
Province, the Canton and the area,” they say. Questioned about
the possibility of a grass-roots consultation, they say they are
open to it, but obviously this would have to be done in a clear
and transparent way, organized by the Ecuadorian State and not
by a transnational company.
For
the time being, the company is departing, leaving behind it division
and conflict among brothers and sisters, family members, neighbours
and old friends. According to reports some community members “had
a salary of US$ 300 to play volley-ball.” While the copper deposits
remain in the area, the threat of mining is still latent.
Meanwhile,
a Constitutional Assembly is being prepared in Ecuador to draw
up the new Constitution. Alberto Acosta, who was Minister of Energy
and Mines for a brief period during the current legislature, and
who will most probably preside the Assembly, has on several occasions
firmly stated his desire to make Ecuador a country free from large-scale
mining.
By Guadalupe
Rodriguez, e-mail: Guadalupe@regenwald.org