From
San Marcos (Guatemala) to Colombia: The Regional Integration of
Gold and Bullets
by Sandra Cuff of Rights Action
ARTICLE
SUMMARY: Analyzing the role of militarization as an integral
part of the control of territory, natural resources and Peoples,
Sandra's article raises doubts about the so-called war on drug trafficking
in mining districts. A comparison is drawn between Plan Colombia
in South America and the current situation in San Marcos, Guatemala,
where, in the same region where the People of Sipakapa maintain
their resistance to Canadian-US company Glamis Gold's Marlin gold
mine, the participation of United States military forces in searches
for weapons and opium poppy crop fumigations has recently been announced
as part of the Plan Maya Jaguar.
FROM
SAN MARCOS ( GUATEMALA ) TO COLOMBIA: THE REGIONAL INTEGRATION OF
GOLD AND BULLETS, by Sandra Cuffe, Rights Action caminando27@yahoo.es
Just
as terrorism apparently abounds around oil fields, it seems as though
the worst hotbeds of drug trafficking are located where powerful
mining interests are to be found. Whatever the pretext, the
recent news from the highlands of San Marcos in Guatemala should
be cause enough for reflection about what really lies behind militarization
and the so-called regional integration initiatives, which amount
to nothing more than the continuation of the historic process of
exploitation and control in Mesoamerica : control of territory,
control of resources and control of Peoples.
MARLIN:
UNDERMINING INDIGENOUS TERRITORY IN SAN MARCOS
In
the highlands municipalities of San Miguel Ixtahuacán and
Sipakapa, San Marcos , Guatemala , lies the infamous Marlin project,
a gold mine that since late last year is being exploited by Montana
Exploradora, S.A., a subsidiary of the Canadian-US transnational
mining company Glamis Gold Ltd. Supported by the World Bank
and the governments of Guatemala and Canada , business as usual
continues despite the strong opposition at the national, regional
and local levels, reaching its height with the People of Sipakapa's
overwhelming rejection of mining activities in their territory,
expressed in a community consultation process that took place on
June 18, 2005.
As
is pointed out in a public declaration ‘We Demand the Closure of
the Marlin Mine', dated March 4 from Sipakapa, that is being circulated
and supported by numerous organizations (for a copy: caminando27@yahoo.es),
“far from being an issue affecting solely the Mayan Sipakapense
and Mam Peoples of San Marcos, the mine will affect the entire western
highlands region of Guatemala because this area has been destined
to become a mining district.”
According
to Ministry of Energy and Mines (MEM) facts compiled by Luis Solano
and the Central American Inforpress Report, in the highlands of
San Marcos alone there are currently 16 mining licenses (one for
prospecting, 14 for exploration and one for exploitation), along
with three more exploration licenses being processed. Eleven
municipalities of San Marcos are directly affected, among them Tacaná,
Ixchiguán and Tajumulco.
CHRONICLE
OF THE WEAPONS SEARCHES FORETOLD
On
March 7th, the Siglo Veintiuno newspaper published an article (‘En
marco de Plan Maya Jaguar, EEUU se involucra en allanamientos')
in which Minister of the Interior Carlos Vielmann announces the
‘support' of Unites States military forces for the searches planned
by various national governmental institutions for Tajumulco, San
Marcos. The announced objectives of the actions were to disarm
the population, eradicate opium poppy crops and resolve both the
problem of drug traffic and the territorial conflict between Tajumulco
and Ixchiguán.
According
to reports, because of the opposition of the local population, the
Guatemalan and US military forces could not enter Tajumulco and
had to stay along the road outside of town, conducting useless weapons
searches in passing vehicles. Despite this, it is still worthwhile
to reflect upon the same issue addressed by a recent communiqué
of the National Front in Defense of Public Services and Natural
Resources (‘Más cara la cura que la enfermedad'): “First
of all, even if foreign troops were not involved, it is quite frankly
absurd to announce beforehand where searches are going to take place,
because this alerts anyone with something to hide and allows them
to hide it somewhere else.”
It
is also worth taking a look at the mention of the resolution of
the decades old territorial conflict between Tajumulco and neighbouring
municipality Ixchiguán as a goal of the military intervention.
According to the same Siglo Veintiuno article, because of
an eviction this past February in the village Once de Mayo, Ixchiguán,
part of the ongoing land conflict, in the same village “a temporary
substation was installed by joint forces (95 police and 50 soldiers),
with orders to protect the people and keep watch over the conservation
and safekeeping of any property that might be at risk.”
Perhaps
these were the same orders behind the brutal and deadly intervention
of military and police forces in Nueva Linda (along Guatemala 's
south-west coast)?
Will
these forces protect the Sipakapense people and keep watch over
the conservation and safekeeping of any property that might be at
risk due to the mining company? Do they keep watch for all
the indigenous Peoples and communities whose territories are at
risk because of landowners and transnational companies?
The
one thing that is certain is that in Guatemala joint forces have
proven their commitment to guard property. This was made abundantly
clear on January 11, 2005, when they murdered Raúl Castro
Bocel, a local indigenous Kaqchikel inhabitant who had been participating
in the protest in Los Encuentros, Sololá, blocking the transport
of a cylinder destined for the Marlin mine. More than a thousand
soldiers and hundreds of police agents guarded the cylinder, while
in a press conference in the capital city, Guatemalan President
Berger declared, “we have to protect the investors.”
GLYPHOSATE
– ‘USE WITH PRECAUTION'
Aside
from the searches for weapons in Tajumulco, the past few months
have also witnessed reports about the so-called US military ‘support',
both in terms of personnel and in terms of small aircraft and other
equipment, for the fumigations of opium poppy crops in the highlands
of San Marcos . Although the negative impacts of these fumigations
on the environment, other crops and health, have been documented
again and again, reactions to the news have been very scarce.
On
February 16th of this year, in El Periódico (‘Combatirán
cultivos de amapola por la vía aérea en San Marcos
'), journalist Luis Ángel Sas cited Minister of the Interior
Carlos Vielmann regarding the imminent fumigations. Vielmann
declared that they were just waiting for the arrival of the aircraft
from the United States in order to start fumigating with Glyphosate
some 200 hectares of land. He announced that the poppy crops
were identified in the municipalities of Tajumulco and Tacaná
during a low flight over the region the previous Friday. National
Civil Police director Erwin Sperisen was quoted as warning that
if vegetable or other subsistence crops “are found within the poppy
plantations, then they will inevitably be affected.”
In
the same article, Gustavo Mendizábal, Norms and Regulations
unit chief of the Ministry of Agriculture and Livestock, pointed
out that the use of Glyphosate is permitted, but that “it is recommended
that it be used with precaution. It is a chemical that acts
upon contact and directly attacks broadleaf plants. It does
not cause harm to people.” To his credit, Sas also explained
that in Colombia, where the same Glyphosate and the same type of
aircraft are used to fumigate coca and poppy crops, there have been
many denouncements of the impacts the fumigations cause in people,
such as vomiting, head and stomach pains, diarrhea and possible
long term effects such as cancer and deformities in newborns.
In
fact, on June 13, 2003, the Superior Administrative Tribunal of
Cundinamarca, the second highest court in Colombia , declared that
the Glyphosate fumigations to eradicate coca and poppy crops violate
collective rights to a healthy and ecologically balanced environment
and to public security and health. Both the State Council
and the Constitutional Court had already emitted sentences banning
fumigations in indigenous territories and demanding the fulfillment
of the Environmental Management Plan required by the Ministry of
the Environment. These decisions set important precedents,
officially recognizing the risks and impacts of Glyphosate fumigations
on health, the environment and Peoples' rights.
Nevertheless,
on June 14, 2003, in an outright violation of the country's own
judicial system, Colombian President Alvaro Uribe announced that
while he remains president, the fumigations will continue. On
another occasion he added that whoever opposed the fumigations anywhere
in the country would be considered a sympathizer of terrorism.
Of
the few opinions that have been made public in Guatemala , it appears
that even organizations that have not been afraid to criticize the
government's position on other issues such as mining have gone mute
when it comes to the fumigations. Very few organizations have
taken a stance and none have questioned the plans. Without
denying the tremendous power and control that the drug trafficking
cartels do command, nor the fact that it is probable that the government
will accuse anyone who criticizes the fumigations with supporting
drug trafficking, is it really possible that no one at all has doubts
as to whether asking the United States military to come help dump
a bunch of Glyphosate on communities' crops, negatively affecting
their environment and health, is really the best way to combat drug
trafficking?
Earlier
this year, on February 19th, the issue was taken back up in a Prensa
Libre article (‘Tajumulco e Ixchiguán, en la mira'), announcing
upcoming fumigations in the municipalities of Tajumulco and Ixchiguán.
The news item appeared again on the front page of the same
newspaper on March 2 (‘Trasiego de anfetaminas'), quoting, alongside
declarations by the Minister of the Interior as to the urgent necessity
of a grand scale antinarcotics operative in San Marcos, the director
of the US State Department's Americas Antinarcotics Program, Antonio
Arias, about a recent report on the subject and his “fear” that
drug trafficking “makes Guatemala's borders vulnerable due to the
traffic of chemical drugs.”
Although,
according to media reports, the opium poppy plants are bought, transported
out of the country and processed in laboratories in Mexico; thus,
it is irresponsible to report about a fear of chemical drug traffic
(drug trafficking) as a justification for the fumigation of poppy
crops (production).
PLAN
MAYA JAGUAR – FUMIGATIONS, WEAPONS AND CYANIDE?
Both
the searches in Tajumulco and the fumigations that have been announced
for various municipalities of San Marcos form part of Plan Maya
Jaguar, a program of joint operations of Guatemalan and US military
forces supposedly with the objective of combating drug trafficking
in Guatemala.
Established
in Guatemala in 1998, Plan Maya Jaguar has been extended several
times since the first joint operatives were carried out in the country.
At the same time, the Southern Command has also carried out
the short-term so-called “humanitarian” New Horizons (Nuevos Horizontes)
program in Guatemala , a US military project that has been denounced
in several Latin American countries as being an attempt to give
the forces a pretty face, so that communities get used to the presence
of foreign troops. In fact, that is how Victor Manuel Gutiérrez
describes Plan Maya Jaguar in his article (‘ Guatemala : Estados
Unidos y nuestra política'), explaining that the Plan “makes
this [military] occupation official and permits the displacement
of foreign military and intelligence apparatus throughout our national
territory with no control whatsoever.”
On
December 6, 2005, the National Congress passed a decree to extend
Plan Maya Jaguar until 2008, following another extension years before
that prolonged the Plan until 2005. Ever since Plan Maya Jaguar
was initially established, it has been for all of Guatemala ; however,
all of the recent announcements about the Plan's joint activities
have been about operatives located specifically in the highlands
of San Marcos .
In
its communiqué, the National Front of Struggle in Defense
of Public Services and Natural Resources asks about the geographic
location of the military intervention: “Why do they come precisely
to San Marcos , department in which the population of one of its
municipalities, in an open and participatory consultation beautifully
demonstrating their dignity, rejected mining exploration and exploitation?
What will follow in this interventionist race? The destruction
of opium laboratories in Río Hondo, Zacapa?”
Perhaps
there will be a different pretext (maybe it is Osama's hideout?)
for Río Hondo, where last year the population, in another
beautiful exercise in dignity, rejected a hydroelectric dam project
in their territory, in a locally initiated municipal consultation.
Whatever may happen in Río Hondo, it is no coincidence
that the zone being militarized is precisely the region for which
a mining district is planned.
As
Inforpress summarizes in their prologue to Luis Solano's recent
book (‘Guatemala, petróleo y minería en las entrañas
del poder'), “the extractive industries have been a target of military
intelligence worldwide, since two of the most coveted prime materials
– oil and gold – are key for the model of the international reproduction
of capitalism.” Furthermore, they note, “from the capital
invested in these industries, there has been a flow of financing
to sustain State terrorism.”
PLAN
COLOMBIA , NOW PLAYING IN A COMMUNITY NEAR YOU
It
is clear that the militarization of mining districts is not a phenomenon
unique to San Marcos . In fact, this department is only starting
to see the beginning of a pattern well-known in Izabal, there from
the 1960s to the 80s the International Nickel Company (INCO, at
that time with controlling interest in EXMIBAL), together with a
series of repressive dictatorships, attempted to continue their
mining business at all cost. However, although militarization
accompanies mining all around the world, it is worth taking a closer
look at the Colombian example for the parallels in the drug war
pretext.
Aside
from this tie, it is also worth noting that over the past couple
of years there have been many signs of closer links between Mesoamerica
and Colombia , now more than ever with the naming of Colombia as
a country with ‘observer' status in Plan Puebla Panama . Also,
there are frequent joint military operations involving Colombia,
the United States and Central American countries under the guise
of joint ‘security', including, of course, the combat of drug trafficking
and terrorism. In fact, during the recent visit of Colombian
President Uribe to Guatemala this past January, the two governments
signed a Security Agreement and decided to create a binational commission
to exchange information and coordinate actions within the framework
of the global ‘struggle' against drug trafficking.
According
to a CERIGUA bulletin, during his visit in the country, Uribe declared
that “in the event that Guatemala should negotiate its inclusion
in ‘Plan Colombia ' of US assistance for the combat of drug trafficking
and other security problems, the Guatemalan government authorities
can count on the collaboration of Colombia .”
“In
military cooperation agreements such as Plan Colombia , they prioritize
mining and oil exploitation zones for the so-called combat of drug
trafficking,” explained Colombian State mining company Workers'
Union (SINTRAMINERCOL) President Francisco Ramírez in a presentation
to the Colombian organization CENSAT. “Plan Colombia supposedly
combats drugs but really what it does is position military and paramilitary
groups that will protect the oil and mining infrastructure of North
American and European companies.”
“One
thing to highlight is that as part of Plan Colombia they said that
three anti-narcotics bases would be constructed. The first
is in the South of Bolivar, a so-called anti-narcotics base that
protects an oil field belonging to the Bush family, the mine that
small miners are disputing with AngloGold and Conquistador Gold
Mines, and Oxy's Caño Limón Coveñas oil pipeline.
In the North of Santander and in Tolima [where the other two
bases are located], it's the same story.”
In
his book ‘The Profits of Extermination,' Ramírez details
some of the atrocious human rights violations in mining districts
up until 2002, for example the 535 registered homicides and the
more than 35 thousand people forcibly displaced by Colombian and
US paramilitary operations in the South of Bolivar, home to one
of the three bases built ‘to combat drug trafficking'. He
points out that since the government of Alvaro Uribe came into power,
an indigenous person is murdered every five days, mostly in areas
of natural resource exploitation.
“In
the mining districts, on average between 1995 and 2002, every year
there have been 828 homicides, 142 forced disappearances, 117 wounded,
71 people tortured, 355 death threats and 150 arbitrary detentions.
There have also been 433 massacres,” continues Ramírez.
ONE
WAR, MANY FACES
Although
these details from Colombia , where an open conflict has continued
for decades, may seem to compare more to Guatemala during the 1980s
than Guatemala today, the psychological and social effects of military
intervention or even just a military presence in the current context
cannot be easily discarded, nor can the efficiency of low-intensity
war.
“They
have programmed our death, studying us, studying when we have gold,
when we have minerals, studying our psychology, how we will react,”
emphasized Doctor Juan Almendares of the Mother Earth Movement of
Honduras during his presentation to the Resistance to Mining working
group at the V Week for Biological and Cultural Diversity, a Mesoamerican
event that took place in Colotenango, Huehuetenango , Guatemala
, this past March 6-9.
In
the past few weeks in Guatemala, there have been denouncements and
worries in reaction to the news that came out in Inforpress' Central
American Report on March 3 (‘Empresas canadienses inician exploraciones
de uranio'), regarding two mining exploration licenses granted by
MEM on January 16th to Gold-Ore Resources, a Canadian transnational
mining company that has been exploring in Central America for years.
According
to the syndicate formed by Gold-Ore along with Pathfinder Resources
and Santoy Resources, two more Vancouver-based companies, they have
been exploring for uranium in Central America since at least January
27, 2005, when a press release announcing the formation of the syndicate
was released.
The
precise location of their explorations were not known until February
16, 2006, when the syndicate announced in another press release
that the companies were exploring for uranium in the municipality
of Esquipulas, in the department of Chiquimula, where the two licenses
now cover 32% (169 square kilometers) of municipal territory. According
to the Inforpress article, Vice Minister of Energy and Mines Jorge
García said “that he did not have knowledge of the uranium
exploration projects, [although] when he saw a copy of the licenses,
he expressed his preoccupation for the issue.”
García
is not the only one who should be worrying. According to the
facts compiled by Luis Solano and Inforpress, the issue is not only
uranium exploration in Esquipulas, but also the many mining exploration
licenses granted in some ten departments of Guatemala for minerals
including the platinum group and/or rare earth minerals. Several
of these licenses are scattered over the highlands of San Marcos
, including in the municipalities of Tacaná, Ixchiguán
and Tajumulco.
“These
companies research gold, but they also research strategic minerals.
But they just don't have any reason to tell us, until now that they
have publicly announced it in Guatemala . From Chiapas to
Costa Rica , we are countries with strategic resources,” explains
Doctor Almendares. “We are important for war.”
THE
DIABOLICAL TRINITY – CAFTA, PPP AND PLAN MAYA JAGUAR
Although
it is clear that militarization and mining walk hand in hand, it
is also worth mentioning what they have to do with other regional
initiatives, such as the Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA)
and Plan Puebla Panama (PPP). Continuing to use mining as
an example, one can see how the different aspects of regional integration
complement each other as tools in a regional control strategy.
“Plan
Maya Jaguar, together with Plan Puebla Panama and the Central American
Free Trade Agreement, constitute a diabolical trinity,” considers
the National Front for Struggle in their communiqué. “The
three together form an articulated malignant scheme: CAFTA in the
economic aspect, the PPP in infrastructure and the Plan Maya Jaguar
as the military component.”
In
reality, CAFTA does not only represent the economic component; more
than that, it represents the international consensus of the neo-colonial
powers, establishing both national and international policies and
laws in favour of transnational corporations. Around the world,
the Canadian and US governments and multilateral institutions such
as the World Bank and International Monetary Fund, together with
the transnational companies themselves, have driven a series of
mining legislation and policy reforms, defining the content in line
with the neo-liberal model.
“The
traffic of influences for the ratification of laws has been one
of the most common forms of impunity of the transnationals involved,”
denounces Inforpress in its prologue to Luis Solano's book.
“Free”
Trade Agreements consolidate this impunity and guarantee, by way
of the chapters dealing with the ‘rights' of investments and the
respective supernational tribunals, that there will be serious consequences
if any government entity should attempt to change anything that
might affect the investments. It is also interesting that
while an international movement has been active in opposing the
United States ' CAFTA, Canada – home to most of the world's global
mining companies – has been negotiating a Free Trade Agreement for
years with four Central American countries: Guatemala , El Salvador
, Honduras and Nicaragua .
In
turn, Plan Puebla Panama is a set of regional initiatives for the
construction and integration of the infrastructure needed by transnational
corporations. The mining industry requires great quantities
of water and energy and good highways that lead directly to good
ports. All of these aspects are key components of the PPP,
which integrates the infrastructure according to the logic of international
trade, business and investment in a series of projects financed
by International Finance Institutions. In the end, they are
loans that will be paid by the future generations of Mesoamerica
.
“The
PPP is a strategic plan for the circulation and commerce of material
goods, but also of resources (water, genes, etc.). And this
always carries along with it a military strategy,” explained Dr.
Almendares in Colotenango. “The struggle against mining is
within this framework of a military and geopolitical strategy.”
Transnational
corporations will gain nothing with all the laws, infrastructure,
or even the control of territory and resources, if they do not also
control the Peoples. Thus, using once again the example of
Colombia , Francisco Ramírez describes militarization as
the third phase, “to give a military response to whoever opposes
mining exploitation.”
In
the case of the highlands of San Marcos , the conclusion here is
that the objective of Plan Maya Jaguar is exactly that.
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