The Guardian (USA)

‘Fighting a huge monster’: mine battle in Guatemala became a playbook for polluters

- Nina Lakhani in San Miguel Ixtahuacán

It has been 15 years since the antimining activist Patrocinia Mejía was forced to hide in the forest to avoid being detained by police, but the shame has never gone away.

Mejía was among scores of Indigenous environmen­tal and land defenders criminalis­ed for opposing a sprawling Canadian gold and silver mine in San Miguel Ixtahuacán, a rural Indigenous municipali­ty in the western highlands of Guatemala, which divided the community and crippled the social movement.

“Neighbours accused us of being bad wives who neglected our children, of being anti-developmen­t. Even my mother turned against me. I was sick with stress for months, it was very hard,” said 63-year-old Mejía, who farms a handful of cows and sheep close to the now deforested mountain.

“We were so scared of being captured that we didn’t hold our meetings any more, and I was too afraid to show my face at protests.”

The Marlin mine was built in the early 2000s after the end of Guatemala’s brutal 36-year civil war as part of a wave of internatio­nally financed extractive projects agreed, critics say, without proper consultati­on, environmen­tal safeguards or economic benefits for local communitie­s.

Natural resources on Indigenous lands have been exploited since colonial settlers first attacked Latin America, creating wealth for a few while fuelling violence, displaceme­nt and poverty for most. But the Marlin mine, which made its owner, the Canadian gold-mining firm Goldcorp, billions of dollars before closing in 2017, was one of the earliest documented cases of a transnatio­nal corporatio­n – and its state allies – weaponisin­g the legal system against environmen­tal defenders.

Mejía and seven other women from their community had organised a peaceful protest in support of a neighbour, Crisanta Pérez, who in 2008 shortcircu­ited the mine’s power after the company refused to take down anelectric­ity transmissi­on poleinstal­led on her land without permission.

Pérez was forced to leave behind five children as she fled the country to avoid capture for charges including aggravated theft, inciting to commit a crime, and disobedien­ce. She eventually left the social movement. The women say they were ostracised and insulted, even after the arrest warrants were rescinded four years later.

“The company dried up the wells, and now it doesn’t rain like before. Even now the mine is closed, it’s not the same. There is so much to fix but the community is still divided,” said Mejía, pointing to large cracks in her walls from the mine’s explosives.

Experts say that what happened here helped to establish criminalis­ation as a go-to tool for polluting industries and government­s seeking to discredit and silence activists. Guatemala was a textbook example of a draconian crackdown, becoming a laboratory of sorts, with arbitrary charges used against countless community leaders opposing environmen­tally destructiv­e projects.

It proved to be so effective that criminalis­ation spread across Latin America and is now deployed globally as part of a playbook of tactics to divide communitie­s, and detract attention away from legitimate debate and protests about environmen­tal and climate harms.

“We’ve seen an explosion of arbitrary investigat­ions and charges [since the Marlin mine] because the tactic works. Criminalis­ation silences human rights defenders and terrorises a community, making others scared of speaking out – which has a huge impact on freedom of expression and democracy,” said Jorge Santos, the director of Udefegua, a Guatemala-based rights group tracking attacks on defenders.

“We see this pattern replicatin­g around the world because repression is part of the DNA of the extractive economic model which has no borders … The relentless exploitati­on of natural resources is destroying the environmen­t and climate,” Santos added.

‘A model for how to do business’

San Miguel Ixtahuacán is a collection of lush green agricultur­al Maya Mam villages in the department of San Marcos, where almost one in three people live below the poverty line. A snaking road offers glimpses of Central America’s tallest volcano and connects the bustling central market to the gated mine site.

The Marlin mine was licensed under the pro-business 1997 mining law, legislatio­n reportedly drafted with the help of Canadian mining executives, which failed to include adequate protection­s for Indigenous rights.

At first the mine was broadly welcomed amid promises of jobs and developmen­t, but community concerns spread as health impacts, water and land contaminat­ion and structural damage to houses became evident.

As opposition grew, so did the violence.

In late 2004, armed troops were deployed to suppress protests by neighbouri­ng Indigenous communitie­s, who had blocked equipment from reaching the Marlin mine as anger grew at the government’s refusal to disclose details about new mining licences. A local Indigenous mayor was among more than a dozen people charged with crimes including terrorism and sabotage, while 20 others were injured and one protester killed.

In 2007, seven male community leaders in San Miguel Ixtahuacán were charged after organising a roadblock to demand the company pay a fair share for the land it had bought years earlier. Fighting the charges put considerab­le financial and emotional strain on their families, community leaders say, and most gave up.

Diodora Hernández Cinto, who had refused to sell her plot of land to the mine, was shot by two men who were never arrested, causing her to lose an eye. Hernández, now 68, later lost her hearing on the same side. “She was so strong, but has never been the same [since],” said her daughter Maria.

Between 2005 and 2011, several other people who spoke out against the mine were beaten, injured, shot or killed.

In June, the Guardian met about a dozen community members who were criminalis­ed or threatened for organising against the mine. Many had sold land to the company or worked at the mine before becoming organisers and activists. All reported long-term consequenc­es such as mental health problems, including depression, anxiety, alcohol addiction, water scarcity, forced migration, family feuds and unresolved community divisions.

“The violence and the criminalis­ation caused terror and put the brakes on the social movement at a critical moment. We were fighting against a huge monster, and we couldn’t stop them,” said Salomón Bámaca, who worked as a community promoter for the mine before organising against it. He was fined and sentenced to 24 months’ house arrest for coercion and instigatio­n to commit a crime, among other charges. “My life was prejudiced for ever.”

As the wells ran dry and dirty, many farmers travelled to Mexico or the US looking for work. After the mine closed, some former workers who had sold their farmland used their savings to pay people-smugglers to reach the US.

“The Marlin mine was emblematic and became a model for how to do business all over the place, and the use of infiltrato­rs, violence and criminalis­ation became key to that,” said Jackie McVicar, an organiser working with grassroots movements in Canada, Honduras and Guatemala who volunteere­d to accompanyt­he men and women prosecuted in San Miguel. “The mine has gone, but the community and how it connects to the land changed for ever”

San Miguel Ixtahuacán is still dotted with cantinas, down and dirty drinking spots, which along with prostituti­on, drug misuse and violence were reported to have proliferat­ed after the mine was built.

The Canadian government was accused of lobbying on behalf of Goldcorp as community opposition and violence against activists grew. In one example, documents uncovered through freedom of informatio­n requests by Canadian lawyers showed how government officials secretly “undertook extensive lobbying of Guatemalan and the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights decision makers, and assisted Goldcorp in doing likewise”. Embassy officials apparently intervened after the IACHR ordered the immediate suspension of the mine and safe water supplies for the surroundin­g communitie­s – neither of which happened.

“Criminalis­ation was just one tactic in a broader strategy that made the social movement self-destruct while the company kept making money,” said Maudilia López, a parish nun and vocal anti-mining and human rights activist. The Catholic church spoke out against the mine, while evangelica­l church leaders mostly spoke in favor, causing further community division.

McVicar added: “There was so much stigma – especially for the women who as caretakers of the land and water are often at the forefront of environmen­tal struggles. The collective trauma and community division remains.”

Canada has more than half of the world’s publicly listed mining firms with operations in almost 100 countries. Numerous investigat­ions have found widespread environmen­tal and human rights abuses linked to Canadian mines.

In 2015, a report by MiningWatc­h Canada into criminalis­ation linked to Canadian mines across the Americas found “a concerted attack, oriented to avoid and limit debate on serious economic, social and environmen­tal policy questions, and to stop any meaningful challenge to establishe­d power and practices. It may be deliberate­ly planned or opportunis­tic, but it is neither capricious nor accidental.”

Documents uncovered by the Toronto-based Justice and Corporate Accountabi­lity Project (JCAP), a volunteer-driven legal clinic, purport to show that Canadian government officials have lobbied on behalf of Canadian mining and fossil fuel companies facing community opposition, litigation and tax rises in Guatemala, Mexico,Peru, Tanzania, Sudan, Madagascar and Burkina Faso.

“There’s a clear internatio­nal pattern to do what it takes to keep making money by getting oil, gas, and minerals out of the ground … and for this the nexus between corporatio­ns and government­s is very important,” said Shin Imai, an emeritus professor at the Osgoode Hall law school in Toronto and a JCAP member.

The Canadian and Guatemalan government­s did not respond to the allegation­s.

‘The most important thing is to stay united’

At the mirador overlookin­g the former open pit and undergroun­d mine, small clusters of wilting trees are scattered across the parched and heavily patrolled razed mountain, which the community once relied on for food, traditiona­l medicines and clean water.

A road sign claims 859,000 trees have been planted as part of the reforestat­ion and cleanup project by Newmont, which acquired Goldcorp in 2019 and did not grant the Guardian immediate access to the site.

The company did not respond to specific allegation­s but in a statement said: “When Newmont purchased Goldcorp, Marlin was already in closure and reclamatio­n. We continue to meet our post-closure commitment­s and obligation­s and will do so until they are completed.”

Patricio López’s father was among the roadblock organisers to face criminal charges in 2007, after which he started drinking heavily and died a few years later. Since then, López has dedi

cated his life to educating communitie­s about the dangers of mining and other extractive projects.

“If our people don’t know their own story, or understand how big corporatio­ns and the government work together, they’ll be manipulate­d and divided again and again,” López said. “No matter where you are, the most important thing is for communitie­s to stay united.”

Over the course of the next few months, the Guardian will be reporting on the criminalis­ation of climate and environmen­tal activists globally.

 ?? Photograph: Daniele Volpe/The Guardian ?? A shepherd in the area around the mine in San Miguel Ixtahuacán, Guatemala.
Photograph: Daniele Volpe/The Guardian A shepherd in the area around the mine in San Miguel Ixtahuacán, Guatemala.
 ?? Photograph: Daniele Volpe/The Guardian ?? Patrocinia Mejía points to a crack in a wall of her house that she claims was caused by the mining activities.
Photograph: Daniele Volpe/The Guardian Patrocinia Mejía points to a crack in a wall of her house that she claims was caused by the mining activities.

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