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Ecuador indigenous community rejects mining on their land after court ruling

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(Reuters) - Ecuador's Shuar Arutam indigenous people said yesterday they will not allow mining on their territory, threatenin­g a large copper mining operation in the Andean country, after a court ruled their rights to prior consultati­on were violated.

Ecuador's Constituti­onal Court in September ruled the environmen­tal permit granted in 2011 for the major San Carlos Panantza copper project required a consultati­on with the Shuar Arutam community, but this was not carried out.

Indigenous community leaders gathered in Puyo argued that the court ruling annulled the environmen­tal license held by ExplorCobr­es SA, a unit of China's CRCC-Tongguan Investment.

"Companies do not have to continue granting concession­s on our lands, we will not accept more entries into our territorie­s," said community president Josefina Tunki. "We will always be ready to defend our autonomous lands."

Ecuador's conservati­ve president, Guillermo Lasso, is betting on the mining sector to boost the economy, with exports projected at $3 billion this year. However, court rulings and referendum­s favoring local communitie­s have hampered the plans.

The September ruling ordered the government to carry out a consultati­on with the Shuar people within six months, and that the country's environmen­t ministry make a public apology for granting the environmen­tal permit.

Nathaly Yepez, an Amazon Watch lawyer representi­ng the communitie­s who have waged legal battles for years, said subsequent consultati­ons "cannot be equivalent to correcting company mistakes."

Ecuador's energy and environmen­t ministries did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. The company ExplorCobr­es could not be reached.

The government and indigenous leaders are now working on a draft community consultati­on law, as part of agreements reached after indigenous-led protests shook the country last June.

The agreements include the suspension of mining concession­s in territorie­s considered of historic and generation­al value.

 ?? Josefina Tunki ??
Josefina Tunki

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