Rodolfo
Arteaga sifts through his records of clinic visits, tests, and studies.
Like many Siria Valley residents, he suffers from ongoing health
problems. Production at Goldcorp’s San Martin gold mine ended in 2008,
but its legacy lives on in surrounding communities, 60 miles north of
Tegucigalpa, the capital of Honduras.
Palo
Ralo, Arteaga’s home community, was relocated to make way for the open
pit mine. Up the hill on a nearby road, Arteaga points to a mountain
range in the distance. “We couldn’t see that far from here before,” he
said. A forested hilltop blocked the view until it was logged, blasted
and doused with cyanide. Down below, now covered with top soil and
grasses, heap leach pad facilities and backfilled tailing ponds have
become permanent parts of the landscape.
The San Martin gold mine in Honduras is one of five emblematic cases in the spotlight at the Permanent People’s Tribunal,
celebrating its 40th session in Montreal from May 29 to June 1.
Supported by more than 40 organizations from throughout Quebec and
Canada, the event includes hearings on the role and responsibility
Canada’s mining industry and government in the violation of human and
environmental rights in Latin America.
Goldcorp’s San Martin mine is also one of the case studies examined in a new report
on Canadian mining in Latin America. Produced by a working group of
Latin American organizations, the report draws on 22 case studies
spanning nine Latin American countries to document a litany of harms,
ranging from environmental and health impacts to forced displacement and
criminalization.
The
working group analyzed the conditions in Canada and host countries that
give rise to conflicts and human rights violations, and presented a
series of recommendations for host countries, the Inter-American
Commission on Human Rights (IACHR), and Canada. The report was submitted
to the IACHR in April 2014 following the presentation of documented
findings to the commission in a November 2013 hearing.
Canada
dominates the global mining industry. Seventy-five percent of all
mining companies worldwide are headquartered in the country. Some 70
percent of all mining company shares are traded on the Toronto Stock
Exchange, which lists corporations involved in more than 1,500 mining
projects in Latin America.
“The
increase in Canadian mining operations in the region is framed by the
foreign policy of the current Canadian government toward developing
countries,” note the report authors. “As government spokespersons have
stated on several occasions, the mining sector plays a fundamental role
in the Canadian government’s efforts to secure a new policy of
cooperation with foreign states.”
Free
trade agreement negotiations, embassy activities, Export Development
Canada financing, the creation of the Canadian International Institute
for Extractive Industries and Development, and the use of development
aid for legal framework revisions all play a part, according to Dora
Lucy Arias of the José Alvear Restrepo Lawyer’s Collective in Colombia,
one of the organizations that produced the report. “In many cases, these
activities involve wrongful interference by the Canadian state and its
companies in the internal legislative processes of the countries in
which they operate,” Arias told the IACHR at the November 1, 2013
hearing.
Concerns
about the involvement of Canada in the development of mining laws and
policies in Colombia, Honduras, and other countries are shared by
University of Ottawa political science professor Stephen Brown.
“What
has happened is that often these new mining codes or regulations reduce
the amount of royalties that are paid to the government, and are very
favourable to mining companies and Canadian mining companies in
particular, since Canadian mining companies dominate the market,” Brown
told Upside Down World.
The
Latin American report calls on Canada to “refrain from providing any
government support, whether through development programs, trade and/or
association agreements, public financing or technical or political
assistance, for the purpose of influencing the enactment of lax
regulatory frameworks for mining investments.”
The
report also addresses rampant impunity. Local residents suffering the
impacts of serious environmental damage and subject to grave human
rights violations face non-existent or inefficient judicial remedies in
host states. The Canadian State, write the authors, “has been called
upon nationally and internationally on numerous occasions to adopt
effective mechanisms to address human rights violations abroad by
Canadian companies.” Despite ongoing efforts to push for such
mechanisms, there has been little progress.
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