
Location: Cadboro Bay United Church: 2625 Arbutus Rd. Victoria. BC
Vidalina Morales from El Salvador is on a national speaking tour to hightight the impacts of Canadian transnational mining on water, the environment and communities.
Vidalina Morales de Gámez, is a member of the National Roundtable against Metallic Mining in El Salvador (La MESA). Vidalina Morales is mother of five children and has worked with ADES – Economic and Social
Development Association of Santa Marta for over 10 years. She has worked directly on mining issues as an organizer in Cabañas communities since 2006.
Background:
In 2007, when the Salvadoran government began to put restrictions on the mining industry, as a result of the efforts made by the Mesa and other members of civil society, two multinational mining corporations, Pacific Rim and Commerce Group, responded by filing lawsuits against the government. The companies claim that their rights as investors are being violated. Pacific Rim, a Vancouver-based company looking to mine in the department of Cabañas, is claiming losses of up to $100 million. On June 1st, 2012 a panel of three arbitrators hearing the case in a trade tribunal that is part of the World Bank ruled that the case would be allowed to continue.
The controversy over Pacific Rim’s mining project in Cabañas has not come without a social cost. To date four environmentalists opposing mining from the region have been murdered, and countless others have suffered from threats, attacks, kidnapping attempts and violence. While the Attorney General’s Office in El Salvador has never done thorough investigations into the intellectual authors of the crimes in Cabañas, local residents say that community divisions and conflict started when Pacific Rim arrived and began promoting their mining projects.
The Mesa is fighting back against Pacific Rim and other companies in El Salvador by educating the population around the dangers of mining, carrying out scientific research to support their positions, and pressuring decision makers in El Salvador to protect the environment and public health. For the Mesa the only way to protect El Salvador from the problems caused by metallic mining is complete ban on all metallic mining. As the debate around a mining ban continues in the Legislative Assembly, the communities and social movement continue to organize and struggle against this dangerous industry.
Sponsorship:
The national tour is sponsored by MiningWatch Canada, Council of Canadians, United Church of Canada, KAIROS, Natural Resource Council of Maine, Salvaide, BTS - RTS.
Local sponsors include Mining Justice Action Committee, FMLN Victoria, Central American Support Committee
This event was recorded. Listen to the podcast.