Protests, Lawsuits and Arson: South American Mine Resistance 12th April

• Four hun­dred pro­test­ers stormed the planned site of the Minas Con­ga mine in Yana­cocha, Peru, and set fire to con­struc­tion equip­ment yes­ter­day. Minas Con­ga would be the biggest gold mine in Peru, and has been the tar­get of sus­tained protests from local indige­nous res­i­dents who say the mine would destroy their water sup­ply. In July, police killed five pro­test­ers in anti-mine clash­es; the deaths led to a pend­ing com­plaint to the Inter-Amer­i­can Human Rights Court.

• On April 3, 30 pro­test­ers crashed the open­ing of the Expom­i­nas trade fair in Quito, Ecuador, where the gov­ern­ment was seek­ing to coax new invest­ments in min­er­al and oil min­ing. Pro­test­ers crashed the inau­gur­al speech by singing a rewrit­ten ver­sion of the pop­u­lar hip-hop song “Lati­noaméri­ca” by Calle 13: “You can­not buy Intag, you can­not buy Mirador, you can’t buy Kim­sacocha, you can’t buy my Ecuador.”

Ecuador is home to a pow­er­ful (large­ly indige­nous) anti-mines move­ment. Left­ist Pres­i­dent Rafael Correa’s sup­port for big min­ing has been a major fac­tor cost­ing him sup­port from much of his for­mer base.

• A Chilean court has sus­pend­ed con­struc­tion of Bar­rick Gold’s long- embat­tled Pas­cua Lama mine, based on com­plaints from local indige­nous com­mu­ni­ties that the mine will destroy their water sup­ply. Unfor­tu­nate­ly, the injunc­tion does not affect con­struc­tion in the Argen­tinean por­tion of the project, includ­ing the process plant and tail­ings stor­age facil­i­ty.