The
past 26th November the people of the Argentinean province of Chubut,
in Patagonia, were witnesses to yet another example of the limits of
democracy when it comes to affecting the interests of transnational
corporations. That province has been in the vanguard of the struggle
against mega mining since 2003, when Esquel, located in one of the most
beautiful spots of the Andes, became the first Argentinean city in
passing a resolution rejecting new mining projects. A few years before,
the Canadian transnational company Meridian Gold had located an area
rich in gold at some ten kilometers from the city, which promised juicy
profits. As is often the case, the project and negotiations with local
and provincial authorities advanced in secret, until one of the
communities of the mapuche people reported that the company was
working in their ancestral land without their consent. After that
denunciation, in October 2002 the neighbors of Esquel started to
self-organize. Echoing the assemblies’ movement that had mushroomed in
the country as part of the 2001 rebellion, a participatory,
non-hierarchical Self-Organized Neighbors’ Assembly Against the Mine
(Asamblea de Vecinos Autoconvocados por el No a la Mina) became their
main organizational structure.
Following
a successful campaign and massive demonstrations, the city council
agreed on calling a popular consultation. Against the politicians of
the main political parties, who campaigned in favor of Meridian Gold,
and despite several cases of intimidation of anti-mining campaigners,
the result of the consultation, held in March 2003, was overwhelming.
81% of the citizens of Esquel decided they were just fine without a
company destroying their mountains and poisoning their waters. Soon
after that, other smaller cities in the area, including Trevelín, Lago
Puelo and Epuyén, organized their own consultations and decided to ban
mega mining. Anti-mining assemblies also sprang in cities on the
Atlantic coast of the Patagonian provinces and in the northern Andean
region and in other provinces, which came together in the Union of
Citizens’ Assemblies (Unión de Asambleas Ciudadanas, UAC), a nationwide
environmental and anti-mining coalition. As a result of these early
struggles, in 2003 the province of Chubut passed a law banning some
types of mega mining. Despite this, transnational corporations kept on
exploring the land for new promising sources of benefits and investing
tons of money in promoting their projects in the area, which somehow
seem to always find enthusiastic governors.
In
this scenario, the June 2013 meeting of the UAC, which was held in
Chubut’s biggest city on the Atlantic (Comodoro Rivadavia), decided to
campaign for a province-wide popular consultation, banning all types of
mega mining projects for good. The province’s constitution, amended
twenty years ago, includes mechanisms of semi-direct democracy. If a
citizen’s initiative manages to get the support of 3% of the voters,
then the provincial congress is forced to discuss it (after which, of
course, it can formally approve or dismiss it). Thus, the UAC set to the
cities, towns and villages of the province to collect signatures for
the new law. After a few months, having found massive popular support,
they surpassed the 3% minimum and in last April they formally presented
the law to the congress. It was the first time this constitutional
right was used in the province.
The
bill was scheduled to be treated on 26th November. Of course,
anti-mining campaigners were well aware that congressmen could vote
against it. As a matter of fact, the provincial government –now in the
hands of the peronist Martín Buzzi, an ally of Argentina’s president
Cristina Kirchner– has his own majority in the congress and is very much
pro-mining. As the debate was expected to be long and heated,
anti-mining campaigners camped outside the congress. The severe police
repression they faced was an indication that things were not going to go
smoothly for them.
What
happened in the end was even worse than the worst scenario they had
imagined. The provincial congress did not reject the proposed law.
Instead, in a tight 15/12 vote, the congressmen of the majority used the
opportunity to pass another law, totally different from the one
proposed by the campaigners, that was not previously known or under
consideration. Basically, the new bill suspends new mining projects for
four months, during which the provincial government is mandated to
facilitate a wide debate on an issue that –it was argued– still needs
“serious” consideration (even if the province has been intensely
discussing it since 2002). After the four months of debates are over,
the new bill instructs the governor to call for a popular consultation
on mining, and to take its result as mandatory. This would sound as good
news for anti-mining campaigners, who had the idea to do that in the
first place. But the tricky bill that was passed demanded that the
popular consultation was not held in the province altogether, but
dividing it by “zones”, so that if one zone wants to have mines it can
have them, while regions that oppose, don’t. That was precisely the
strategy of mining corporations for the province. Since some areas –like
Esquel and other Andean towns– are (for the time being) considered
lost, the best way to go about popular resistance is to try in others.
The new bill not only enables that, but in fact also cancels the
validity of the 2003 provincial law that had partially banned some types
of mega mining. It is the perfect dream for companies.
In
fact, in the past years both the governor and the businessmen have
been pushing together to promote silver, uranium and lead mining
projects in the central plateau of the province, an area of scattered
and impoverished little villages where transnational corporations have
been running “corporate social responsibility” initiatives for a decade,
hoping to win the hearts and minds of the inhabitants. It is not sure,
but quite possible, that the combination of this kind of bribery and
the forms of intimidation already used in the Andean towns may win
pro-miners some local victories. And although it may sound “democratic”
to let each community chose, in reality it is not. As campaigners have
argued, the provincial courses of water run through the central
plateau. Any contamination there will affect the whole province. If the
corporations get away with it, it would mean that a village of 300
people will have the right to decide on the water that use 200.000.
As
if this political move was not scandalous enough, the peronist
congressman Gustavo Muñiz, who voted against the popular initiative and
for the new unexpected law, was caught in a rather infuriating
photograph taken during the session. As the bill was under debate, the
photo shows him chatting on his mobile phone with Gastón Berardi, local
executive officer of the Canadian mining corporation Yamana Gold. The
image is clear enough as to read what they were saying. While Berardi
was indicating a needed change in the fourth article of the new bill so
as to make “zoning” clearer, the congressman replied that he needed not
worry as the governor would interpret it correctly upon
implementation. The photograph went immediately viral throughout the
country, forcing the main national newspapers –initially little
inclined to report on this matter– to run stories about it. Muñiz had
to publicly admit that he was taking “suggestions” from a company at
the very moment a law was being debated in congress. (He seems to have
been less keen on chatting with campaigners or normal folks.) No wonder
that the spokespeople of the anti-mining movements denounced that, in
Chubut, congressmen answer to foreign corporations and not to the
people.
Meanwhile,
as the journalist Darío Aranda reported, the President of the Mining
Chamber of Chubut, Néstor Alvarez, declared that he was happy with the
new law, which, for him “opens up a new perspective” for the advance of
mining in the province.
As
this story unfolds, it seems that the last word was still not heard.
Anti-mining movements in the province are strong and determined and it
would not be surprising that the scandal returns as a backlash against
the winning party. Several voices, including the Catholic Church and La
Campora –the youth branch of the kirchneristas– have already demanded a
government veto against the new law. Esquel, Rawson and other
provincial cities have already organized massive demonstrations against
politicians and their corrupt behavior. Campaigners already knew it,
but Muñiz’s awkward photo made it blatantly clear for everyone else in
the country. Corporations pose a serious threat not only to the
environment, but also to democracy.
from here
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