The following article continues to discuss the "Colombian Gold Rush." and was published by the Council of Hemispheric Affairs, a organization that I know nothing about. But I am impressed with the article!! This article talks about the same issue that the Fault Lines movie shows but in the region where CPT works. We have been accompanying the FEDEAGROMISBOL since the assassination of Alejandro Uribe in 2006.
Colombia’s Gold Rush: The Silver Lining for Paramilitaries and Guerrillas
- Colombian government neglect allows for guerrilla and paramilitary groups to extort and tax local miners.
- With no distinction between illegal and informal miners, the Colombian government continues to marginalize innocent miners to promote its interest and to facilitate the operations of multinational mining companies.
- Multinational mining companies may be funding paramilitary groups in an effort to relocate local populations.
With
gold prices soaring to around USD 1,600 per ounce, Colombia has made a
concerted effort to stimulate foreign investment in its mining sector.[1]
As a result, the Colombian government has favored multinational mining
companies over small to medium scale local miners. While this new gold
rush represents a significant source of investment and finance for the
federal government, it also helps fund Colombia’s four-decade long civil
war. After years of government-sponsored eradication, paramilitary and
guerrilla armies have begun to abandon coca production and are turning
to gold mining, as well as the extortion of mining communities, to
generate significant sources of revenue. Moreover, as a result of
governmental favoritism, multinational mining corporations utilize
national military forces and paramilitaries to harass native
populations, local miners, and unionized workers in an effort to force
them from their gold-laden lands.
Illegal Taxes on Informal Mining
National army protection of work sites is a standard stipulation in
mining contracts between the Colombian government and multinational
mining companies. However, informal mining operations, many of which
have been passed down by families for generations, are left with no
protection to defend themselves against the often- extortive practices
of paramilitary and guerrilla forces. Moreover, with no clear
distinction between informal and illegal mining at the federal level,
local miners face the same punitive measures as paramilitary miners.
Paramilitary and guerilla groups, such as the Rastrojos, the Urabeños, the Paisas, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) and the Oficina de Envigado,
force local informal miners in the gold-rich Antioquia, Córdoba and
Valle de Cauca departments (or provinces) to pay security fees and taxes
on mining equipment. These payments quickly become a great source of
revenue for renegade military groups. For example, FARC charges 3,800
Colombian pesos per backhoe and a monthly rent and mining site
protection fee of up to 141,000 Colombian pesos.[2] In the northern department of Antioquia, the FARC’s 36th
Front charges between three to eight million pesos (about USD 1,650 and
USD 4,500) for each bulldozer entering territory under its control. Verdad Abierta,
an independent think tank specifically focused on the Colombian civil
war, estimated there are 2,000 bulldozers operating in an area of 8,500
square kilometers alongside rivers in the Bajo Cauca region alone, which
is mainly controlled by the Urabeños and the Paisas paramilitaries.[3],[4] With this booming mining sector, it seems that paramilitary and guerrilla groups have identified new-found fuel for their fire.
Bogotá
has taken a hard-line stance against illegal mining—an umbrella term
that includes paramilitary, guerrilla and informal mining. Jim Wyss from
the Miami Herald reported that informal miners repeatedly have been charged for financing paramilitaries and guerrilla groups.[5]
Favoring large mining companies, Bogotá’s indiscriminate mine hunt has
left poor Colombian miners between a rock and hard place.
The current Minister of Mining and Energy, Carlos Rodado, and president of mining company Mineros S.A., Beatriz Uribe, both agree that at least half of the coal and gold mines in Colombia are illegal.[6],[7] In the Antioquia department alone, 84 percent of mining is non-government sanctioned.[8] Colombian Chamber of Mining (Cámara Colombiana de Minería) has estimated that the mining industry will lose one billion Colombian pesos, or USD 563,233.69, due to illegal mining.[9]
The local poor population is attracted to illegal mining because of its
profitability. Local miners are then caught in a catch-22. With no
protection from the government, local miners are obliged to pay
protection fees to paramilitary and guerrilla groups, and are then
marginalized by the government for aiding these rebel groups.
When Multinationals Attack
In
their quest to belligerently relocate indigenous afro-Colombian
communities and local miners, multinational mining companies have become
infamous for their under-the-table deals with the Colombian government,
military, and paramilitaries. Specifically, Canadian mining companies
Greystar Resources, B2Gold and South-African mining company AngloGold
Ashanti are just a few of the multinationals that are not averse to
using their extreme wealth to threaten, extort, displace, kidnap and
assassinate common Colombians in their hunt for gold.
Both
AngloGold Ashanti and Toronto-based B2Gold Company have industrial
mining sites throughout the southern part of the Bolívar department,
which makes up part of the Magdalena Medio region. This volatile area
has been plagued with violence and displacement since the peak of coca
production in the 1980s. According to Magdalena Medio’s Development and
Peace Project, 116,453 people in the region were forcibly displaced
between 1994 and 2007, with 53,202 of the displaced individuals from
southern Bolívar.[10]
Moreover, 2,355 Magdalena Medio civilians died from political violence
between 1997 and 2007; 380 of these victims were from southern Bolívar.
Between these years, paramilitaries were responsible for 75% of human
rights violations, with another 5% of crimes attributed to the FARC, 4%
to the Colombian Army and 2% to another Marxist guerrilla group, the
National Liberation Army (ELN).[11]
The disproportionate amount of political violence and displacement in
southern Bolívar is indicative of the pressure put on Colombian
communities by multinational mining companies.
While
there are no official links between these international mining
corporations, paramilitaries, and the national army, on the ground,
trade union figures and local community members tell a different story.
Human rights groups MiningWatch Canada, Inter Pares and CENSAT-Agua Viva
have reported that paramilitaries and Colombian soldiers told local
residents that their “operations are designed to protect the interests
of international mining companies in the area.’”[12]
Paramilitaries and soldiers are simply carrying out the policy of the
Colombian government—a policy that greatly enhances the interests of
multinational mining companies at the expense of local communities.
Mining
and labor unions have been particularly targeted. After the
assassination of union leader Alejandro Uribe by the Colombian National
Army’s Nueva Granada Anti-Aircraft Battalion in 2006, Teófilo
Acuña, president of the Agriculture and Mining Federation of Southern
Bolívar (FEDEAGROMISBOL), was falsely arrested for organizing meetings
where anti-multinational sentiments were expressed.[13] Moreover, the Águilas Negras,
a right-wing paramilitary group, have sent death threats to nine people
and organizations, including FEDEAGROMISBOL, because these targets are
“’against the presences of multinationals, against the presence of the
Army.’”[14]
The common Colombian is not receiving adequate protection due to
Bogotá’s bias in favoring multinational corporations. Ignoring or
financially backing threats, forced evictions, and the killing of local
union leaders, as well as community members, signals that the Colombian
government and multinational companies are hardly sensitive to civic
guarantee, and may even be directly responsible for human rights abuses
against Colombian dissidents.
Another
Canadian mining company, Greystar Resources, has carried out extensive
gold exploration through its Angostura project, operating 55 kilometers
away from Bucaramanga
the capital city of Santander department. This year, Greystar has been
fighting off pressure from environmental activists, small-scale miners,
and peasant farmers as a result of its decision to expand the open-pit
Angostura mine; this deposit is said to contain more that 11 million
ounces of gold.[15]
The
Land and Conflict Report by MiningWatch Canada, Inter-Pares and
CENSAT-Agua Viva details Greystars’ occupation strategy: the
multinational first enters into an agreement with the Army to secure the
area, “define the area to be mine[d], put up a military base financed
by the company, and buy up the corresponding land.”[16]
The National Centre for Indigenous Cooperation asserts that this method
is commonly used by all multinationals working in the area.
Paramilitaries generate revenue from gaining control of the land and
colluding with multinational corporations and sometimes the Colombian
government itself (see 2006 “parapolítica” scandal).[17]
By the same token, investigative reporting done by Al Jazeera’s Faultlines
has revealed a surge in death threats from the right-wing paramilitary
group—the New Generation of Black Eagles—to residents of a small
afro-American gold mining community in Cauca.[18]
This surge coincides with AngloGold Ashanti’s newfound interest in gold
exploration in that region, thereby raising the question of whether or
not the multinational is orchestrating these attacks from behind the
scenes.
Fool’s Gold
While
there should be a vehement campaign against illegal mining, the
Colombian government and armed forces must make a clear distinction
between paramilitary and guerrilla-run illegal mining, and informal
mining. Until Bogotá begins to put the interests of the people before
those of multinational mining companies, the Colombian population at
large will continue to be victims in this often sanguine, futile quest
for El Dorado.
References for this article can be found here.
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