Members of a Salvadoran environmental organization travelling to meet with the Guatemalan government, to protest a new [Goldcorp Inc.] gold mine, were kidnapped and robbed by men wearing Guatemalan police uniforms.
They are members of the Center of Investigations into Investment and Commerce (CEICOM) and were travelling with journalists from Salvadoran TV Channel 10. They had been driving to Guatemala City to discuss the risks to bodies of water shared by Guatemala and El Salvador if a proposed [Goldcorp Inc] gold mine is developed.
After their cameras and computers were taken from them, the activists and journalists were left on an abandoned farm.
This was the second time members of CEICOM were kidnapped on their way to a meeting in Guatemala regarding the Cerro Blanco mine. On July 30 of this year, the same thing happened as they drove in Guatemala to a meeting with that country’s Human Rights Ombudsman.
CEICOM delivered a letter to El Salvador’s foreign minister, demanding that the Salvadoran government spur a complete investigation into these events. The foreign ministry has agreed to send a diplomatic request to its counterparts in Guatemala urging a thorough investigation.
The concerns of environmental activists about Cerro Blanco were described in this
IPS news story earlier this year:The Cerro Blanco gold and silver mine in the southeastern Guatemalan province of Jutiapa, on the border with El Salvador, is under fire from environmentalists in both countries concerned about the threat it poses to the shared Lake Güija and rivers on either side of the border.
“Toxic waste water from the mine will be discharged into the Ostúa river in Guatemala, and will flow into the 45 square kilometres of Lake Güija, and on into the Lempa river, the main river basin in El Salvador,” David Pereira, a Salvadoran activist with the non-governmental Research Centre on Investment and Trade (CEICOM), told IPS.
In his view, the mine should be shut down because it will cause irreparable damage to water sources, soil, animals and plants and human settlements in the vicinity. The main risk is to the Lempa river, which supplies more than three million Salvadorans, with activities like agriculture, livestock raising and hydroelectric power plants depending on it.
Pereira’s conclusions are based on a study by Dina Larios, professor of geochemistry and hydrogeology at Ohio University in the United States, which contains serious warnings about waste water from the mine.
Dumping water with high concentrations of fluorine, arsenic and boron in the Ostúa river at a temperature of 35 degrees would endanger its biodiversity and cause thermal pollution, affecting fishing which is the livelihood of hundreds of families in the area, Pereira quoted the study as saying.
The Cerro Blanco mining project, approved by the government of former Guatemalan president Óscar Berger (2000-2004), is now under construction and is expected to start producing gold and silver later this year.
The Salvadoran Catholic Church has also expressed its concern about the mine, and asked El Salvador’s leftwing President Mauricio Funes to intervene.
The assault on the CEICOM members is likely to increase the visibility of Salvadoran concerns about this proposed mine in neighboring Guatemala and any potential threats to El Salvador’s most important watershed. Anti-mining groups in El Salvador are already planning their next round of actions.