The editorial discusses how a new mine in Guatemala will create thousands of jobs for unemployed, poverty-stricken Guatemalans:
Residents of El Estor, a small Q'eqchi community of 40,000 people located in
northeast Guatemala, cheered when they heard that Vancouver-based Skye Resources was interested in reopening a local abandoned nickel mine…It's easy to see why there was such excitement. Skye Resources estimates that it will employ 1,000 people and create four indirect jobs in the community for every new mining
job. That plus an overall investment of at least $539 million is not irrelevant for an impoverished town with one of the highest illiteracy rates in the country -- over 40% for indigenous men and 35% for indigenous women.
However, this mine almost did not get off the ground due to local protests against the mine.
But last year organized and well-funded opposition nearly squelched the deal. In a country with such dire needs for capital and technology to lessen the want of the poor, it is worth exploring whether such anti-mine activism truly expresses the will of the people. Looking behind the scenes, the funding and instigation of the activism appears heavily driven by international nongovernmental organizations that end up discouraging development while trying to fulfill their own mission.Who were the organizations?
Boston-based Oxfam America and Toronto's Rights Action are two anti-development NGOs active in Guatemala. Oxfam has partnered with MadreSelva (Mother Jungle), a Guatemala City environmental group headed by affluent urbanites, to block mining projects.
And what do these groups do in Guatemala?
International NGOs in Guatemala train local leaders to "empower" minorities andAnd what does the "evil" mine do?
indigenous groups and to denounce the mines as "neo-colonial" ventures. But the reality is that the very nature of the NGO saves it from having a real stake in the communities it affects through its activism. It can blow through town like a hurricane disrupting development and then be gone.
The mines, on the other hand, have long-term relationships to manage. ConcernedThe mayor of the town benefiting from foreign investment and who fought off unelected, socialist NGOs put it best:
about its role in Sipacapa, for example, Glamis funded the construction of a local road that was not needed for the mine but was beneficial to the poor community. It offered to fund 32 new teaching positions to help meet the increasing demand for public education in the area. The company also took an unprecedented step by helping to launch an independent monitoring association that will provide environmental studies, while ensuring that Glamis reports back to the communities and to other stakeholders.
"They justify their campaigns with our poverty," he says. "That's unfair." On the day of the pro-mine rally, he declared Sept. 30 to be El Estorian Dignity and Foreign and National Investment Day.
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