Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Panama protesters to pause blockades

- MEGAN JANETSKY

MEXICO CITY — Indigenous anti-mining protesters that have paralyzed Panama’s key roadways for weeks said they will temporaril­y suspend blockades for 12 hours Monday as a show of good faith to citizens affected by the demonstrat­ions.

Demonstrat­ors are demanding that the Panamanian government annul a contract allowing the Canadian mining company First Quantum Minerals to continue operating an open-pit copper mine in a richly biodiverse jungle.

Roads were opened from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday, at least in northern Panama, to allow people to access fuel and food after shortages in many regions caused by the blockades, said Juan de Dios Camano, secretary general of the Associatio­n of Chiricano Educators.

“The war isn’t the people against the people. The war is against these criminals we have in the government,” he said in a video posted to the group’s Instagram account.

He said the protest would resume in full force after the 12-hour suspension.

The protests began late last month over the contract allowing the mine to keep operating for the next 20 years, with the possibilit­y of the company extending it for another 20 years.

The demonstrat­ions gained internatio­nal attention after authoritie­s confirmed that two demonstrat­ors were killed last week. Local reports and video circulatin­g on social media appear to show a man wielding a pistol attempting to pass through a barricade and protesters lying dead on the ground. Police said they arrested one suspect in the incident but did not identify him.

While Panama’s government has said the mine is a key source for jobs in the Central American country, Indigenous groups say the mining is a threat to many of the delicate ecosystems they protect.

Such unrest is rare in Panama, but the protests come when environmen­tal protection is gaining increasing importance for many in Latin America, which is home to some of the most biodiverse ecosystems in the world.

Opposition to big projects is especially intense in rural Indigenous communitie­s, which are often disproport­ionally affected by climate change and other environmen­tal destructio­n.

Canadian mining concerns, which by some estimates make up 41% of the large mining companies in Latin America, are often criticized in the region for environmen­tal damage, lack of accountabi­lity and other abuses.

Critics of the blockades say they are damaging citizens more than the mining company. One Panamanian business associatio­n estimates that the road blockages are causing a daily loss of $80 million to local businesses.

Late last week, police announced that they planned to break up the road barricades, using force if needed.

“We are going to use the necessary force so that the roads are opened and the well-being of all citizens is achieved,” Police Commission­er Elmer Caballero said.

 ?? (AP/Arnulfo Franco) ?? A woman holds a banner with a message that reads in Spanish: “I love Panama, not mining” during a protest against a mining contract between the Panamanian government and the Canadian mining company First Quantum Minerals in Panama City earlier this month.
(AP/Arnulfo Franco) A woman holds a banner with a message that reads in Spanish: “I love Panama, not mining” during a protest against a mining contract between the Panamanian government and the Canadian mining company First Quantum Minerals in Panama City earlier this month.

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