Ascendant’s Incredible 2007 Reports/ increíbles informes de Ascendant del 2007

By , March 31, 2008
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Ascendant’s Unbelievable 2007 Year-end Reports

Yes, it’s that time of year again!! Ascendant just published it’s 2007 Financial and Management and Discussion Analysis reports, and here are some of the more interesting information contained in the reports and what they “forgot” to include.

The documents avoid mentioning important events that could profoundly affect Ascendant’s future in Ecuador, which transpired during the past 12 months, and makes the following incorrect claims:

a) It says nothing of the fact the government legally annulled the company’s main concessions in Ecuador; its Golden 1 and Golden 2 concessions. The reports state that the company received a government communication that purports to annul said concessions, but in fact, the annulment is legal and is in full effect. In spite of the loss of the concessions, the company continues to list the ex-properties as currently owned. The loss of the concessions clearly constitutes a material event which was not reported.

b) The company’s purposely avoids mentioning that in October of 2007, the government, through it’s National Institute for Agricultural Development (Spanish acronym: INDA ), annulled the ownership rights to 17 of the company’s properties in the Junin area. The company had purchased these properties, as it has maintained in the past, to access its Junin mining concessions. Loss of the properties puts the future development of the Junin project at risks.

c) The company fails to disclose that in late 2006 its Environmental Impact Study was rejected by Ministry of Mines and Petroleum officials. It misinforms the public by stating that it is in the process of responding to observations made to the study. There is huge difference between making observations to an EIA, and having it outright rejected on technical and legal grounds by government officials.

d) The company is still maintaining that it owns the challenged inferred mineral deposits in its Golden 1 and Golden 2 Junin concessions, even though:

i. It no longer owns the concessions

ii. Micon International affirmed in 2007 it could no longer verify its earlier, and inflated, estimates due to damage, loss and or theft of original core samples.

As you recall, in 2005 CEDA challenged the legality of MICON’s work in establishing the inferred mineral content of the company’s Junin deposit.

e) As in previous years, the company claims to have incurred exploration costs on its Junin mining concessions. For 2007, it claims to have incurred 1,9 million dollars in such costs. Yet, the last year any exploration activity was carried out in the Junin area was in 1996. Furthermore, and as the company itself admits in the reports, the company has been unable to get it’s Environmental Impacts Study for exploration approved. It is illegal to undertake any mining activities in Ecuador without approval of Environmental studies. The misleading information published by the company could give investors a false idea that the company is engaged in exploration activities in the Junin concessions when nothing could be further from the truth.

f) There are several business transactions between ex-company directors and the present board involving hundreds of thousands of dollars (see Telimbela and Magdalena properties, pages 13-14 Consolidated Financial Statements). In light of the uncertainties surrounding the future of mining in Ecuador resulting from the change in government and the fact that Ascendant already has lost the title to several mining concessions, plus the government’s widely publicized plans to re-write the mining legislation and to pass a mining mandate that would annul thousands of mining concessions, some of these dealings are highly suspect.

g) Losses. 2007 was a record year for Ascendant. The company lost $10.4 million in the past 12 months, and claim to having spent $ 5.6 million of that on exploration; about 50% more than in 2006. As the company was busy losing money, properties and whole concessions, the wages and benefits, nonetheless, increased from $1 million to $1.7 million.

http://www.ascendantcopper.com/Content/FlashPaperEng/ACX_MDA%20YE123107%20FINAL.swf
http://www.ascendantcopper.com/Content/FlashPaperEng/ACX%20FS%20YE123107-FINAL.swf

Los increibles informes de Ascendant para el 2007
Ascendant acaba de publicar sus informes gerencial y economicos del anio 2007. Entre las cosas mas destacable que alegan, es la siguiente:

El informe alega u omite la siguiente informacion:

a) No menciona la revocatoria de la Golden 1 y Golden 2 (alegan que el oficio del gobierno pretende, o alega, revocar las concesiones)

b) Debido a varias ilegalidades, el Instituto Nacional de Desarrollo Agricola anulo 17 titulos de propiedades de Ascendant en 2007. Sin embargo, los informes no lo mencionan. En anteriores ocasiones, la empresa habia dicho que habia adquirido dichas propiedades para acceder a sus concesiones.

c) La empresa sigue insistiendo que es propietaria de las concesiones Golden 1 y Golden 2

d) Todavia usan el exagerado calculo del yacimiento de cobre hecho por Micon Internacional en el 2005 (4X mas alto de que los japoneses encontraron). En el 2007 Micon alego publicamente no poder confirmar su calculo debido a danios a las muestras geologicas!!

e) En vez de decir que el gobierno le rechazo el Estudio de Impacto Ambiental, dice que la empresa se encuentra “estudiando” las observaciones hechas a dicho estudio.

f) y alegan que la decision de suspender sus actividades (en sept) fue decision de la empresa

g) Perdidas. Ascendant rompio records en el 2007. La empresa perdio $10.4 millones durante los ultimos 12 meses, y alega haber gastado $ 5.6 en exploracion; aproximadamente 50% mas que en el 2006. A la vez que la empresa estaba perdiendo plata, propiedades, y concesiones, los salarios y beneficios, sin embargo, incrementaron de $1 millon, a $1.7 millones.


http://www.ascendantcopper.com/Content/FlashPaperEng/ACX_MDA%20YE123107%20FINAL.swf

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One Step Closer to Nationalization / Nuevas de Intag

By , March 24, 2008
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Ecuador Takes One Step Closer to Nationalizing Its Mining Industry
(and other news….)

On his weekly radio address to the nation on the 15th of March, Ecuador’s president told Ecuadorians he would exploit its mineral resources in the south of the country through the creation of a national mining corporation. The last 6 or so months, Correa has expressed support for exploiting the four large gold-copper deposits in the south (belonging to Aurelian, Corrientes Resources, Iamgold and IMC- all Canadian corporations) As for Ascendant’s ex-Junin project, when mining comes up in Correa’s pro-mining speeches Junin and Intag are never mentioned, and no mining is planned for the north of the country (the status of Ascendant’s ex-Junin concessions has not changed- they are in the hands of the government)

The seemingly pro-mining stance by the president is in direct opposition to the anti large-scale mining position most Constitutional Assembly members, and most of Ecuador’s civil society holds. Additionally, in all the public forums organized by the Constitutional Assembly, the answer has been a resounding NO to large-scale mining projects. During the past 3 months, this position has received very strong support from Ecuador’s largest indigenous organizations, including CONAIE and ECUARUNARI. The latest manifestation of rejection to large-scale mining came on the 11th of March as part of a multitudinous march on the capital by thousands of indigenous from all over the country.

It is the Constitutional Assembly, and not the President, who will re-write the constitution. In this context, there are calls from several important sectors of the nation, including major political parties, to ban all large-scale metallic mining projects. It is this issue, more than any other, which has created the most friction within Correa’s own party.

Meanwhile, the plans for the mining mandate are on hold. The mandate would annul those concessions that were not annulled in January of 2008,until such a time that a new mining law is approved by the yet-to-be elected national congress (which could be a very long time). There are several versions up for debate, and most of them call for ban on large-scale and open-pit metallic mining in Ecuador.

And other news….
Ascendant has made the news in other forums. For example, it had the distinction of being on the list of mining companies criticized by the February 14 report of the Earthworks-Oxfam’s No Dirty Gold Campaign, which lists companies criticized for various unethical behavior, including violating human rights, dumping wastes on rivers and oceans, for their alleged involvement in armed or militarized conflict, or forced relocation of nearby landowners and/or indigenous peoples. http://www.mineweb.com/mineweb/view/mineweb/en/page68?oid=46846&sn=Detail

In the “Additional News From the Weird” category, it now seems official that Ascendant will acquire St Genevieve Resources. The Montreal-based company has a couple of highly unproductive mines in Arizona and seemed on the brink of total meltdown. The company’s stock price has hovered at 1cent per share lately (yes, $0.01). Ascendant’s own shares have hovered in the 10 cent range recently, and have been on a downhill ride for quite sometime. Without its Junin mining concessions, and the disappointing Chaucha drill results (bad enough to scare off its Chilean partner earlier last year), there’s really nothing to Ascendant. Chaucha’s exploration results, it’s worth mentioning, was earlier evaluated by a paid Ascendant employee.

La nacionalizacion de los recursos mineros mas cerca en el Ecuador
El presidente Rafael Correa, en su ultimo discurso semanal radiofonico (Sabado (15-03) le dijo a la nacion que explotaria el cobre y el oro en el sur del pais a traves de la creacion de una corporacion minera nacional. Durante los ultimos seis meses, Correa ha expresado su apoyado a la explotacion de cuatro yacimientos de oro y cobre en el sur del pais (pertenecientes a Aurelian, Corrientes Resources, Iamgold and IMC- todas empresas canadienses) Junin e Intag nunca se mencionan, y ninguna mineria esta concebida para el norte del pais (el estatus de las ex-concesiones de Ascendant en Junin no ha cambiado- permanecen en manos del gobierno)

Esta postura por el presidente se encuentra en oposicion directa a la posicion de la mayoria de los asambleistas, y la mayoria de la sociedad civil ecuatoriana. Ademas, en todos los foros publicos organizados por la Asamblea Constituyente, la respuesta a sido un contundente NO a la mineria a gran escala. Durante los ultimos 3 meses, dicha posicion ha recibido un fuete respaldo de parte de las organizaciones indigenas mas grande del Ecuador, incluyendo a CONAIE y ECUARUNARI.

Es la Asamblea Constituyente, y no el presidente, quien elaborara la constitucion. Y, dentro de este contexto, ha habido varios reclamos de importantes sectores del pais, incluyendo de parte de importantes partidos politicos, para prohibir todo proyecto minero metalico a gran escala. Mas que cualquier otro tema, este es el que mas friccion ha creado dentro del partido de Correa.

Mientras tanto, los planes para el mandato minero esta en espera (yamismito). El mandato anularia las concesiones que no fueron anuladas en enero del 2007, y suspenderia nuevas concesiones hasta que la nueva ley de mineria sea redactada por el congreso nacional, aun por elegirse (lo cual podria demorar mucho tiempo). Existen varias versiones en discusion del mandato, y la mayoria prohibirian la mineria metalica y a cielo abierto en el Ecuador.

Por otro lado (y en la categoria de Aunque Usted no lo Crea), Ascendant se encuentra en proceso de adquirir a St Genevieve Resources, una pequenia y practicamente bancarrota empresa canadiense con un par de minas impresionantemente improductivas en el estado norteamericano de Arizona. El precio de las acciones de St Genevieve es de un centavo de dolar por accion- la de Ascendant esta por los 10 centavos de dolares… ¿Que estaran pensando los inversionistas??

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Amnesty for Intag Defenders! / Aminstía para defensores inteños del ambiente!

By , March 14, 2008
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NIGHTMARE ENDS FOR ACCUSED IN INTAG

Huge victory for Intag residents opposing Ascendant’s mining project

On March 14, the National Constitutional Assembly overwhelmingly approved a general amnesty in favor of 360 defenders of the environment who were facing criminal lawsuits as a consequence of their opposition to large hydro, petroleum, and mining project in Ecuador.

Included in the amnesty were all Intag residents facing lawsuits presented by Ascendant Copper, or persons linked to the company. What this boils down to is that all these criminal lawsuits will be annulled.

In all, over 40 Intag residents will benefit from the Assembly’s decision.

Meanwhile, the Assembly is still mulling over the mining mandate to annul thousands of mining concessions in the country (see our previous updates)

INTEÑOS BENEFICIADOS POR DECISIÓN DE LA ASAMBLEA NACIONAL CONSTITUYENTE


Esta tarde, 14 de Marzo, la Asamblea Nacional Constituyente resolvió, con 91 votos a favor, de otorgar Amnistía a 360 defensores de la naturaleza- incluyendo varios moradores de la zona de Intag.

En el caso de Intag, los y las campesinas habían sido acusados por parte de la empresa minera Ascendant Copper, sus empleados o representantes de varios delitos penales, algunos de ellos totalmente fabricados, como resultado de varios enfrentamientos debido a la presencia de la empresa minera canadiense.

En un momento llegó a existir más de 12 juicios penales en contra de decenas de inteños e inteñas opositores al proyecto minero cuprífero, pero los comuneros de la zona de Intag prevalecieron en los 4 juicios que llegaron a ventilarse en las cortes del país. Los inteños y representantes de organizaciones defensoras de derechos humanos habían calificado la lluvia de juicios y la manipulacion del sistema judicial del país como una infame mecanismo para intentar de intimidar a la oposición a la minería. En Imbabura, el Doctor Edgar Merlo fue quien defendió a los y las procesados en Imbabura del podería político y económico de la empresa transnacional.

Entre los afectados positivamente por la amnistía constan Jaime Polivio Pérez, y Carlos Zorrilla- dos dirigentes inteños que han tenido que enfrentar varios juicios penales por su oposición al proyecto minero de Ascendant ((nota- tan pronto tenga la lista completa de las decenas de inteños amnistiados, lo enviaré))

Para acceder a la información de la Asamblea Constituyente referente a esta decisión: http://asambleaconstituyente.gov.ec/boletines/amnistia-para-defensores-de-los-derechos-humanos-criminalizados-aprueba-asamblea.do

BOLETÍN DE PRENSA
DECOIN
www.decoin.org

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Ascendant leading the march to the chopping block

By , February 29, 2008
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ASCENDANT COPPER LEADING MINING COMPANIES TO THE CHOPPING BLOCK

The government let the official cat out of the bag today by stating that next week the Constitutional Assembly will vote on the mining moratorium and revocation mandate. The Assembly was voted into power last year with the main goal of re-drafting the country’s Constitution, and has the power to legislate.

Though there are several draft versions of the mandate making the rounds, all of them apparently call for a revocation of all large mining concessions (over 200 hectares in some versions). Some versions call for a total ban on large-scale metal mining projects, and to all mining in certain biodiverse or water-rich catchment areas. Mining will also very likely be off limits in all indigenous territories.

According to reliable sources, at least one version calls for the juiciest mining concessions to be taken over by a proposed state mining corporation.

Elements in common with many of the draft mandates is a moratorium on new mining concessions, a virtual moratorium on large-scale mining and the issuance of new concessions until a brand new mining law is drafted, which is meant to bring much higher rents to the country, and to institute much stronger social and environmental safeguards. However, today the Ministry of Mines and Energy said that mining will only proceed if it is clearly in the benefit of the country, and let it be known that the current mining law has only benefited mining companies and created social unrest. He went on to say that this year the government will introduce a new mining law.

Until such a law is drafted and approved by the yet-to-be elected Congress, many, many months will come and go.

The new law will undoubtedly limit or do away with large-scale or open-pit mining projects, reinstate the royalty at much higher rates, and raise taxes for the mining companies. Environmentalist sectors foresee very stringent social and environmental regulations in the new law, with free, prior and informed consent of all communities and local governments potentially affected by the projects as one of the most important safeguards. In the best of cases this would apply to small and medium scale mining projects, since most indigenous organizations, communities and environmental organizations are betting for an end to medium and large-scale metal mining, and all open-pit.

In his news conference today the Minister of Mines and Energy referred to the fact that some large-scale mining projects have caused “serious frictions between environmental groups and rural communities that are opposed to mining in their territories ”; very likely in parte referring to the well-publicized violence and conflicts linked to Ascendant’s presence in the Intag area (site of its Junin project, which the company lost title to in January of this year)

To further dampen the mining panorama for mining companies in Ecuador, as of two months ago, the biggest indigenous organizations have come out strongly against large-scale mining. This includes the powerful Ecuarunari and CONAIE, Latin America’s most powerful indigenous organization. These organizations join hundreds of other smaller, social, human-rights and environmental groups opposed to mining as a model of development in Ecuador, with sovereign issues, the threat to water and mining’s environmental impacts being some of the more important main rallying points.

The mining companies, meanwhile, keep spending millions of dollars in publicity, and of late even gained the support of the government of Canada, who has been co-hosting forums with mining companies and selling the squeaky clean-and false- image of the responsible Canadian corporation (the ultimate oxymoron in the mining world)

Keep tuned. There’s a good chance next week, the Constitutional Assembly will vote on the mining moratorium.

The Ministry’s news conference (in Spanish) can be accessed at: http://www.univision.com/contentroot/wirefeeds/lat/7419316.html

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Ascendant’s Downfall

By , February 6, 2008
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Ascendant’s Downfall

Carlos Zorrilla

The government of Ecuador recently annulled the main concessions to Ascendant Copper Corporation’s Junin project; the company’s most valuable resource. The reasons for Ascendant’s title revocation has nothing to do with unpaid mining patents, the main reason the government revoked many of the 585 other mining concessions in Ecuador. And, it’s likely that thousands of other concessions will also soon be revoked.

Investors shouldn’t complain that they weren’t warned about Ascendant’s downfall; they should have seen it coming years ago.

During the past three and one half years, or ever since Ascendant made landfall in the Intag area, there have been numerous warnings about irregularities, violence, and illegal deals and activities, linked to the company’s Junin copper-molybdenum project. These red flags were published on the Internet and elsewhere during all this time. In addition, DECOIN, one of the many local organizations opposing the project, repeatedly warned the public about possible misleading information put out by the company regarding not only the legality of the concessions, but also contesting fundamental things like the size of Junin’s copper deposit and the nature and extent of the local opposition.

From the very beginning DECOIN denounced publicly the probable illegal nature of the Junin concessions acquired by Ascendant, and the fact that the acquisition violated the community’s constitutional right to be previously consulted. It now turns out that this lack of consultation may be at the heart of Ascendant’s downfall in Ecuador.

When the company started claiming the Junin copper deposit was four times greater than what a Japanese five-year exploration program inferred was there, we denounced it here in Ecuador, and in Canada to different Securities Exchange Commissions (which have failed miserably in protecting Canadian investors). The irregularities we noticed led us to denounce in Canada and on the web, that the work by Micon International, the company that came up with the inflated copper reserve estimate, violated Canadian legislation. In 2007 Micon itself finally announced that, due to improper handling and “termite damage” sustained by the Japanese mineral samples, they were unable to confirm their own earlier higher estimate of the copper deposit. Our organization made sure the BC Securities Commission took note of this serious inconsistency. Yet, not long afterwards, one of Ascendant’s officers, termite damage notwithstanding, publicly announced in a press release that they were sitting on one of the world’s biggest copper deposit.

One of the things our organization went out of its way to denounce was the company’s unrealistic portrayal of the obstacles its Junin project faced on the ground, and especially the character of the local resistance. The company, on the other hand, kept insisting that the opposition came principally, or only, from one organization (DECOIN), and that it was composed of a very small group of “radicals”, or ecoterrorists. However, if anything stands out in the resistance to this project, it’s the amount, determination and diversity of the forces opposed to the Junin project, which includes all local governments, and most communities.

The Failed Environmental Impact Study. In yet another instance of misinformation, when, in late in 2006, the government rejected the company’s Environmental Impact Study, Ascendant reacted by telling its investors that they were “studying” the observations made by the government to their study. That’s a very far cry from being handed an outright rejection.

What Exploration? In its 2006 year-end report, the company claimed it had spent over 3.4 million dollars in exploration activities in Junin. However, no exploration has taken place since 1996; something our organization pointed out in one of our many blogs, and something we made sure the BC Securities Commission knew about. The question remains unanswered: just what did the company spend all that money on? “Security” seems to have been one of those black holes a lot of money went into, and we believe that the ensuing consequences of the misuse of security forces were a major contributing factor to, not only the company’s downfall, but perhaps the downfall of a lot of other Canadian Junior mining companies in Ecuadors, who lost their concessions along with Ascendant’s in January of this year.

The company security plan involved hiring the international firm of Honor and Laurel, a company registered in Colombia, but not Ecuador, thus illegally working in the country. One of Honor and Laurel’s founders comes from British military intelligence background, which has been fertile ground for spawning mercenary armies. The company’s security plan also saw the hiring of several other security firms to supposedly protect employees in the Intag area, but which the locals correctly interpreted as tools for intimidation.

One of the outcomes of the company’s security investments resulted in a paramilitary-like attack against defenseless community members, involving dozens of hired, heavily-armed thugs dressed in private security outfits, who tried to shoot and tear-gas their way past a community roadblock. The whole thing was filmed and photographed in high quality digital media and broadcasted to the world. This so angered the – at the time- industry-friendly government, that it immediately issued the first of many stop-work orders against Ascendant. The abuses by the security thugs were so outrageous that they were denounced internationally by several Human Rights organizations, including CEDHU, Latin America’s most prestigious Human Rights organization. Amnesty International also became involved in investigating and denouncing other instances of intimidations against local opponents to the company’s project, including: a judicial set up to try to imprison one of DECOIN’s member; plus numerous death threats, and an attempted lynching. Global Witness also investigated the intimidating tactics. In other words, the issue became an international one, so that it is nearly impossible for investors not to have heard of the grave incidents linked to the company. Ascendant, on its part, continued to make light of the confrontations like the paramilitary attack, at first saying the thugs were “agricultural consultants”. The company has never apologized to the communities, or to the persons injured or shot in the attack.

Land Trafficking. The investigation by the government’s anti-corruption commission into illegal land trafficking, which eventually led to Ascendant losing 17 of its properties in the Junin area in October of 2007, is another example of gross negligence and underreporting by the company. The purchase of land was a strategic part of the company’s plan to gain access to their concessions and depopulate the area. The company, as far as we can determine, never reported this significant material fact to neither its shareholders, nor to Canadian regulatory authorities.

These are not, by far, all the examples of what we consider to be gross corporate irresponsibility committed by the company (for more examples www.decoin.org) And, it’s not like the information was that difficult to find on the Internet. For example, the electronic magazine, Upside Down World, as well as Counter Punch, Z-magazine, The Dominion, plus the Ottawa Citizen are just some of the many print and electronic publications that have reported on the issues mentioned above.

This does raise the very troubling question as to just how many red flags need to be raised in order for regulatory institutions in Canada to step in, investigate and stop this kind of corporate mayhem. Apparently, in Canada, all these flags were not enough.

And, though the long and disturbing nightmare seems to be finally over in Intag with Ascendant’s departure from this beautiful land, a disturbing aspect still lingers in the air, like a pestilence. And that is, what forces keep governmental regulatory institutions in Canada from preventing this kind of outrageous corporate behavior? And, what can be done to prevent the same thing from happening all over again, either here or somewhere else around the world? The lack of governmental involvement affects not only communities on the ground, but also Canadian investors, who each year lose billions of dollars to unethical corporations (in Ascendant’s case, the shares have lost over 90% of their initial value).

Since 2005, the British Columbian Securities Exchange has received several of our denunciations and official complaints regarding Ascendant Copper Corporation’s irresponsible behavior. We’ve also traveled to Canada and denounced it to the Parliament’s Commission on Foreign Affairs and International Trade. Yet, after more than two years, all we’ve received from the Securities Commissions is empty form letters saying they are investigating and that they are unable release any information. Meanwhile, Canadian mining companies keep going back to the unregulated Great Canadian Stock Exchange Giveaway to fill their bottomless pockets, so they can continue to fund widespread social and environmental havoc overseas.

But the Toronto Stock Exchange is not the only source of funding for companies the likes of Ascendant. Another is “strategic” partnership with so-called reputable companies- companies that remain on the sideline as others do their dirty work for them. In 2006 Rio Tinto Zinc signed a deal with Ascendant knowing of the very serious environmental issues, and manifold social conflicts and legal challenges facing the project and the company. After the paramilitary attacks, and other outrageous denunciations of grave human rights abuses taking place at Ascendant’s JUNIN concessions, Rio Tinto, who considers itself to be a socially responsible corporation, did not terminate the contract with Ascendant; perfectly highlighting the hypocrisy behind the social responsible corporate world.

We are certain that Ascendant Copper Corporation is gone for good from the Intag area and that they’ve lost the Junin mining project. But unless major changes take place where, and how the companies get their funding, we won’t rest.

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More Concession on the Chopping Block / Se cancelarán más concesiones

By , January 29, 2008
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More Concession on the Chopping Block
Espaniol abajo…

Published in El Univeso Newspaper (Ecuador’s largest daily)

Monday January 28th, 2008

Mandate will revoke mineral concessions
QUITO

A decision by the National Constituent Assembly will broaden the
government’s resolution to revoke 587 mining concessions. The mining
industry association rejects the mandate and warns of a possible work
stoppage.

The government has drafted a new mandate to declare all mining
concessions null. Last week 587 mining concessions were revoked of a
total of 4,112 registered with the Ministry of Mines and Petroleum.

The document was delivered to assembly members of Alianza Pais
(“Country Alliance,” the official movement of President Rafael Correa)
this past Friday indicating that concessions held by companies in the
phase of exploration will be shelved if they haven’t made any
investment before December 31st, 2007.

Also included are concessions for which conservation patents have not
been paid by March 31st for the years 2004, 2005, 2006 and 2007, as
well as those located within protected areas.

The mandate, prepared by the Ministry of Mines and Petroleum, puts a
timeline of one year on renegotiation of concessions. If in this time
an agreement is not reached with mining companies, mineral rights will
be cancelled permanently. During this period, new concessions will not
be granted and pending requests will be postponed.

Details
Reaction

Industry
President of the Chamber of Mining, César Espinosa, indicated that
this mandate puts the mining industry in stalemate and that its
content affects sector investments.

Work Stoppage
The association representative announced that the sector could decide
upon a work stoppage as a means of rejecting the mandate proposed by
the government.

Government proposal suggests canceling concessions in which no
investment has been made.

The 587 mining concessions revoked by the Ministry of Mines and
Petroleum of a total of 4,112 was only a precursor for the outcomes of
the mining mandate, drafted by the government to regulate and declare
the cancellation of all mining concessions.

The draft document, delivered last Friday to assembly members who are
part of the official Country Alliance movement by the Undersecretary
of Mines, José Serrano, states that mining concessions in the phase of
exploration that have not seen any investment before December 31st of
last year will be shelved.

Also included in this group are those affected by the administration’s
decision; those for which conservation patents have not been paid by
March 31st for one or more years during the years 2004, 2005, 2006 and
2007; as well as those located in protected areas.

In article 4 it directs the Ministry Mines and Petroleum to begin a
process of negotiation over remaining mineral rights under new rules
to include royalties; environmental, technical, and economic controls;
determination of a referential price; and terms and sanctions in case
the agreement is breached.

The same Secretariat of the State will draw up guidelines for this process.

The forementioned elements are not found within the current Mining Law
or in the Law for the Promotion of Investment and Citizen
Participation (“Trole 2,” approved in August 2000), in which mining
company obligations are based upon conservation patent payments and
production.

The former establishes the obligation to pay from $1 to $16 annually
per hectare according to the number of years of operation, and the
latter obliges payment of $16 annually.

The mandate, drafted by the Ministry of Mines and Petroleum, places a
one year limit on renegotiation and if an agreement with mining
companies is not reached in this time the cancellation of mining
rights will be permanent.

During this period, new concessions will not be granted and pending
requests will be postponed.

President of the Assembly, Alberto Acosta, had previously indicated in
an interview with El Universo that they were expecting the mining
mandate because there is “a hemorrhage of mining concessions for which
the State does not receive royalties.”

President Rafael Correa in his report to the nation also pointed out
that they are preparing a new Mining Law, which will establish a State
Mining Corporation and that concessions will be suspended until the
new law is written up.

Aware of the government’s intentions to create a new legal framework
for the activity, the Popular Democratic Movement (MPD) and Pachakutik
presented their proposals for the mining mandate to the Secretary of
the Assembly.

The MPD proposal suggests that the country be declared free of
large-scale open pit mining; designating natural sources of water as
untouchable, protected areas in which all types of extractive activity
should be prohibited; that all mining and water concessions be
returned to the state, among other aspects.

Assembly member César Grefa speaking for Pachakutik says that large
scale mining concessions between 1,000 and 5,000 hectares should be
revoked. According to him, open-pit mining activities should not take
place on lands near towns and communities.

What it is known

“A stab in the back”
President of the Chamber of Mining, César Espinosa, described the
mandate as “a stab in the back,” given that the sector has agreed to
dialogue and that it has been working with the government on the new
Mining Law. He indicated that they had planned eight workshops and
that the second took place last Thursday. Espinosa restated that the
only aim of this mining mandate is to put the industry in stalemate
given that it had already become paralyzed once government intentions
became known and that now, with this decision, that investors will be
affected.

Pressure Tactics
The mining sector, which provides employment for 120,000 people, is
considering a work stoppage, said César Espinosa of the Ecuadorian
Chamber of Mining. The organization provided its reaction to the
cancellation of 587 concessions this past Friday.

Canadian Corporations
The largest mining companies in the country are Ascendant Copper,
Ascendant, Ecuacorriente, Lowell, IamGold, Aurelian Resources,
Nambija, Dynasty Metals, Cornerstone. The majority are Canadian, from
the country considered to have the best technology in the sector.

Visits to Montecristi
Since public hearings with the Assembly began, the Natural Resources
working committee has been visited by the Faculty of Mining and
Petroleum from the Central University, the National Chamber of Mining,
the mining company Ecuacorriente, the Front for the Defense of Nature
and Life, the Youth Network, the Front of Women from El Pangüi
(Province of Zamora Chinchipe) and other organizations.

Statistics: 536.387,58 hectares
The cancellation of 587 mining concessions, declared by the Ministry
of Mines and Petroleum last Friday, affects a total of 536 387.58
hectares in nine provinces of the country.

http://www.eluniverso.com/2008/01/28/0001/8/2BEABE55E76F4055A94ACBF9C7CDBD0B.aspx

http://www.eluniverso.com/2008/01/28/0001/8/2BEABE55E76F4055A94ACBF9C7CDBD0B.aspx

Mandato hara caducar las concesiones mineras

Recursos

GRAFICOS

Noticias Relacionadas

Propuesta con sugerencias para Ley

Enero 28, 2008

QUITO

Con la decision de la Constituyente se ampliara la resolucion tomada de revertir 587 concesiones mineras. El gremio de la mineria anuncia su rechazo al mandato y advierte sobre una posible paralizacion de actividades.

El Gobierno tiene listo un nuevo mandato para declarar la caducidad de todas las concesiones mineras. La semana pasada se revirtieron 587 concesiones mineras, de un total de 4.112 que tiene registradas el Ministerio de Minas y Petroleos.

El documento borrador llego a manos de los asambleistas de PAIS el viernes pasado y seniala que se archivaran las concesiones de las empresas que en fase de exploracion no hayan realizado ninguna inversion al 31 de diciembre del 2007.

Ademas se incluyen las concesiones que no hayan pagado las patentes de conservacion hasta el 31 de marzo de los anios 2004, 2005, 2006 y 2007, y de las que se encuentren en areas protegidas.

El mandato, redactado por el Ministerio de Minas y Petroleos, pone el limite de un anio para la renegociacion de las concesiones y si en este tiempo no llegan a un acuerdo con las mineras la caducidad de los titulos sera definitiva. Mientras tanto, no se otorgaran nuevas concesiones y se archivaran las peticiones pendientes.

Detalles

Reaccion

Industria

El presidente de la Camara de Mineria, Cesar Espinosa, indico que este mandato pone en jaque a la industria minera y su contenido afecta a las inversiones en el sector.

Paralizacion

El representante del gremio anuncio que el sector podria ir a una paralizacion de actividades como medida de rechazo a este mandato propuesto por el regimen.

Regimen entrego propuesta para archivar concesiones que no hayan hecho ninguna inversion.

La reversion de 587 concesiones mineras, de un total de 4.112, por parte del Ministerio de Minas y Petroleos, solo fue un preambulo para lo que regulara el mandato minero elaborado por el Gobierno y que declarara la caducidad de todas la concesiones mineras.

El documento borrador, que fue entregado el viernes pasado a los asambleistas de Acuerdo PAIS por el subsecretario de Minas, Jose Serrano, determina que se archivaran las concesiones de las operadoras mineras que en fase de exploracion no hayan realizado ninguna inversion al 31 de diciembre del anio pasado.

En ese grupo tambien se incluyen las que esten pendientes de resolucion administrativa; de aquellas que no pagaron las patentes de conservacion hasta el 31 de marzo de los anios 2004, 2005, 2006 y 2007, por anio o acumulativo; y de las que se encuentren en areas protegidas.

En el articulo 4 dispone al Ministerio de Minas y Petroleos iniciar un nuevo proceso de negociacion de los titulos mineros con las que se salven de ser cernidas, pero bajo nuevas reglas que incluyen regalias, controles ambientales, tecnicos, economicos, precio referencial, plazos y sanciones de incumplimiento.

Todo este proceso requerira de un instructivo que debera ser redactado por la misma Secretaria de Estado.

Los aspectos antes mencionados no estan contemplados en la Ley Minera o de la Promocion de la Inversion y la Participacion Ciudadana (Trole 2, aprobada en agosto del 2000), en la que la obligacion de las mineras se centra en el pago de las patentes de conservacion y de produccion.

En la primera se establece la obligatoriedad de cancelar un valor de 1 a 16 dolares anuales por hectarea minera, dependiendo de los anios de funcionamiento, y en la segunda determina la obligacion del pago de 16 dolares anuales.

El mandato, redactado por el Ministerio de Minas y Petroleos, pone el limite de un anio para la renegociacion, si en este tiempo no llegan a un acuerdo con las mineras la caducidad de los titulos es definitiva.

Mientras tanto, no se otorgaran nuevas concesiones y se archivaran las peticiones pendientes.

La llegada de este mandato fue alertada por el presidente de la Asamblea, Alberto Acosta, quien en una entrevista con este Diario indico que habra un mandato minero porque existe “una hemorragia de concesiones mineras de las que el Estado no tiene regalias”.

Asimismo, el presidente Rafael Correa, en su informe a la nacion, dijo que se esta preparando la nueva Ley Minera, que se creara la Corporacion Estatal Minera y que se suspenderan las concesiones hasta que se redacte la nueva ley.

Conocedores de las intenciones del regimen de darle un nuevo marco a la actividad minera, el Movimiento Popular Democratico y Pachakutik presentaron sus propuestas de mandatos mineros ante la secretaria de la Asamblea.

El MPD sugiere declarar al pais libre de la explotacion minera a gran escala y a cielo abierto; senialar como zonas intangibles y zonas de proteccion las reservas naturales de agua y prohibir a perpetuidad cualquier actividad extractiva; que se reviertan al Estado todas las concesiones mineras y de agua, entre otros aspectos.

Pachakutik, por medio de su asambleista Cesar Grefa, sostiene que deben caducar las concesiones mineras de gran escala que se realicen de 1.000 a 5.000 hectareas. Para el, la actividad minera no se podra realizar de manera abierta, en terrenos cercanos a pueblos y comunidades.

Lo que se sabe

‘Punialada por la espalda’

El presidente de la Camara de Mineria, Cesar Espinosa, califico al mandato como “una punialada por la espalda”, puesto que todo el sector aposto por el dialogo y se sento a trabajar con el Gobierno la nueva Ley Minera. Indico que estaban planificados ocho talleres y que el segundo se llevo a cabo el pasado jueves. Espinosa resalto que la sola intencion de este mandato minero pone en jaque a esta industria porque ya se habia paralizado hasta saber el rumbo que le daria el regimen, y ahora, con esta decision, afectara a los inversionistas.

Medida de hecho

El sector minero, que da empleo a 120.000 personas, analiza iniciar una paralizacion, dijo Cesar Espinosa, de la Camara de Mineria del Ecuador. El viernes pasado, el organismo mostro su reaccion a la caducidad de 587 concesiones.

Empresas de Canada

Las mineras mas grandes en el pais son Ascendant Cooper, Ascendant, Ecuacorriente, Lowell, IamGold, Aurelian Resources, Nambija, Dynasty Metals, Cornerstone. La mayoria son de origen canadiense, pais al que se lo considera con la mayor tecnologia en esta area.

Visitas a Montecristi

Desde que se iniciaron las audiencias en la Asamblea, la mesa de Recursos Naturales ha sido visitada por la Facultad de Mineria y Petroleo de la Universidad Central, la Camara Nacional de Mineral, la empresa de extraccion minera Ecuacorriente, el Frente en Defensa de la Naturaleza y la Vida, la Red de Juventudes, el Frente de Mujeres del Pangüi (Zamora Chinchipe) y otras organizaciones.

Cifras

536.387,58

Hectareas. La caducidad de las 587 concesiones mineras, que determino el Ministerio de Minas y Petroleos el viernes pasado, suma un total de 536.387,58 hectareas, en nueve provincias del pais.

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*****ASCENDANT FINISHED IN INTAG- FIN DE ASCENDANT EN INTAG

By , January 26, 2008
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AS THE MINISTRY HAS SAID, THE REVISION OF THE CONCESSIONS WILL CONTINUE AND WILL PROBABLY RESULT IN HUNDREDS OF OTHER CONCESSIONS REVERTING BACK TO THE STATE!!

Ecuador revokes hundreds of mine concessions

(Adds deputy mining minister’s comments and details, paragraphs 11-19)
By Alonso Soto and Alexandra Valencia
QUITO, Jan 25 (Reuters) – Ecuador’s leftist government revoked hundreds of mining concessions on Friday, highlighting its determination to boost control over the Andean nation’s natural resources.
Shares of Canada’s junior mining company Ascendant Copper plunged 28 percent in Toronto after it lost a high-profile project. But the measure had little effect on some of the biggest players in the sector.
Mining and Petroleum Minister Galo Chiriboga told reporters the state was revoking 587 mining contracts because companies failed to pay fees on concessions for reserves of copper, gold and other metals.
“Based on legal norms, (the government) decided to revoke these contracts,” he said.
Ascendant, which lost its Junin project, accused the government of President Rafael Correa of bowing to pressure from environmental groups.
“None of this is true … the government was rushed into this,” John Haigh, Ascendant’s investor relations chief, said in a telephone interview.
Ecuador has little precious metal output, but dozens of foreign companies are exploring in the sector where nearly 4,000 concessions have been awarded.
By scrapping concessions, Correa sent a signal to the private sector that he wanted to overhaul rules for the industry. But the ally of Venezuelan’s leftist President Hugo Chavez also avoided a battle with the most important foreign investors who generate revenue for the impoverished nation.
Last year, Correa moved more aggressively against foreign oil companies, ordering them to hand over almost all of their windfall profits from high prices.
Since then, Correa has shown signs of moderating his radical policies as his popularity ratings have fallen mainly due to perceptions he is too confrontational.
CORREA RULES
Ecuador’s Deputy Mining Minister Jose Serrano later told Reuters that Friday’s move was “not an action against mining but a move to put the sector in order.”
He warned that the government could revoke more concessions later this year as part of an ongoing probe.
Those concessions will be later auctioned, but he denied speculation that revoked concessions will be later awarded to a planned state mining company.
Serrano said the move would not affect the country’s biggest companies, which include Canadian miners Aurelian Resources, Corriente Resources and Iamgold Corp.
In the case of Ascendant, the government had already limited the company’s work. Last year, it ordered the company to halt the Junin project’s operations on charges it had violated mining regulations.
Serrano said Ascendant can appeal the order.
Friday’s announcement should help appease environmentalists and residents across southern Ecuador, where most of the mining concessions are located. They have lobbied Correa to increase control over mining concessions following complaints the state was indiscriminately handing out contracts in previous years.
The government has already started negotiations with Aurelian and Corriente on their terms for doing business in Ecuador and boost state participation in current deals.
In general, it wants to rewrite rules for the industry by introducing royalties, making it more difficult to grant concessions and setting a windfall tax that should ensure more state revenue. (Writing by Saul Hudson; Editing by David Gregorio)


FIN DE ASCENDANT EN INTAG:
ES IMPORTANT SEÑALAR QUE ESTE ES SOLO EL PRIMER PASO DE LA REVISIÓN DE LAS CONCESIONES EN EL PAÍS (cz)

http://www.lahora.com.ec/frontEnd/main.php?idSeccion=673537
La reversión de 587 concesiones mineras anunció ayer el ministro de Minas y Petróleos, Galo Chiriboga, quien explicó que esta decisión se dio debido a la falta de pago de patentes de conservación, como lo establece la Ley de Minería y el Reglamento General Sustitutivo del Reglamento General de la Ley de Minería.

“No es una acción contra la minería”, dijo Chiriboga e indicó que la reversión de esas concesiones suman un total de 536.387,58 hectáreas.

Dijo que el Ministerio de Minas y Petróleos remitirá a la Contraloría los expedientes de aquellas concesiones que no pagaron sus patentes para que abra los respectivos juicios coactivos.

El ministro explicó que éste es un primer informe respecto a la caducidad de las concesiones y adelantó que el proceso de revisión continuará y en los próximos días se incorporarán nuevas concesiones mineras que serán caducadas en cumplimiento a lo establecido en la Ley de Minería actual.

Además, expresó que se revirtió las concesiones Golden 1 y Golden 2, ubicadas en Íntag y cuyo propietario era la compañía.

Ascendant Copper, debido a que las mismas fueron otorgadas al amparo del artículo 7 de una de las leyes “trole”, que determinaba que la concesión minera era un derecho real; es decir, como tener un bien inmueble, una casa o un terreno.

Esto, a criterio de Chiriboga, ha generado un manejo dispendioso de las concesiones mineras. “Una sola persona tiene cien concesiones”, aseveró.

El titular de la cartera de Minas y Petróleos aseguró que las notificaciones de las caducidades fueron ya notificadas a los concesionarios.

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Darker Days Ahead for Mining in Ecuador- CONIAE se prununcia contra la minería

By , January 9, 2008
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DARKER DAYS AHEAD FOR CANADIAN MINING COMPANIES IN ECUADOR
NATIONAL ASSEMBLY TO REGULATE MINING

CONAIE SE MANIFIESTA CONTRA LA MINERIA EN ECUADOR{
ASAMBLEA NACIONAL REGULARÁ LA MINERÍA

On January 8th, CONAIE, Ecuador’s largest and most powerful indigenous organization, signaled its intent on joining the anti-mining resistance sweeping Ecuador in a news release. The organization, composed of dozens of smaller indigenous organizations and federations representing indigenous people from all over Ecuador said, through its president, Luis Macas, that the conservation of Ecuador’s natural resources would be a major theme for discussion in their next annual meeting, scheduled for January 10th through the 12th, and, in Mr. Macas’ own words: For us, the declaration of Ecuador as a country free of mining is fundamental.

In another part of the news release Mr. Macas stated that:

In this congress natural resources will be in the discussion, especially the mining and petroleum policies that, in this country have not changed at all. I think we need to revise the contracts, we need to revise the concessions; things cannot go on as they are. As such, we insist on CONAIE’s proposal that the natural resources need to be nationalized, and should be administered by the State and should not be in the hands of transnational companies which have violated our sovereignty and the dignity of the people where the resources are found”

CONAIE, it’s worth pointing out, is the most powerful civil society organization in the country, in the past responsible for the ousting of two Ecuadorian presidents, and the adoption of major national policies.

Together with the mushrooming growth of anti-mining movements sprouting all over the country, CONAIE’s insertion in the struggle signals much darker days ahead for the future of mining development in Ecuador.

Assembly announces regulation of the mining sector
Source: EL Comercio Newspaper, 10 January 2008

“We are working on a mandate that will help fix the mining situation. With anguish we’ve seen social confrontations, a complete lack of respect of society, and lack of respect of the environment” The head of the Assembly charged with reforming the constitution pointed out (translated from article)
Mr. Acosta, the president of the National Assembly, is a well-known public figure for being opposed to opening up Ecuador to large-scale mining. In his statement on the 9th of January, Mr. Acosta also singled out the unethical and illogical issuing of mining concessions in Ecuador, and vouched to do something to address the problems.
http://www.elcomercio.com/noticiaEC.asp?id_noticia=163058&id_seccion=3

——————————————–

Ecuador: III Congreso de la CONAIE

ALAI/Minga Informativa

La amenaza de las empresas transnacionales, la posicion frente a la Asamblea Nacional Constituyente y la eleccion de nuevos dirigentes son algunos de los temas que abordara el III Congreso de la Confederacion de Nacionalidades Indigenas del Ecuador (CONAIE) que se reunira del 10 al 12 de enero en la ciudad de Santo de los Colorados.

Luis Macas, presidente de la CONAIE, informo a la prensa que en el Congreso se fijara la posicion de la organizacion frente al gobierno presidido por Rafael Correa. Macas adelanto que el movimiento indigena no es incondicional al regimen y que la “agenda de la CONAIE es distinta a la del gobierno nacional”. Nuestra agenda ­agrego- es de lucha, nuestra agenda es de defensa de los recursos naturales, nosotros decimos la moratoria petrolera es una necesidad del pais, para nosotros declarar al Ecuador pais no minero es el punto fundamental.

Macas senalo que en “tanto en cuanto avancemos en los cambios profundos que necesite el pais, el movimiento indigena estara ahi y estaremos en pie de lucha para que esos cambios se generen y se den”. Sin embargo, el dirigente indigena enfatizo que no caeran en el juego de la derecha que trata “de convencer al pueblo ecuatoriano que aqui no se esta haciendo nada” e intenta boicotear el trabajo de la Asamblea Nacional Constituyente (ANC) que se encuentra reunida en la ciudad de Montecristi con el objeto de redactar una nueva Constitucion politica y reformar el marco institucional del Estado.

Otro tema que abordara el Congreso de la CONAIE son las estrategias para hacer realidad el Estado plurinacional, propuesta que fue presentada al presidente de la ANC, Alberto Acosta, el pasado 22 de octubre luego de una masiva movilizacion que se realizo en Quito. Tras un proceso de discusion en las comunidades de base de la Sierra, Costa y Amazonia que se prolongo por dos anos, la CONAIE elaboro un proyecto de Constitucion que recoge no solo los planteamientos de los pueblos indigenas sino de otros sectores sociales excluidos historicamente del poder.

La tesis del Estado plurinacional implica el reconocimiento de los autodeterminacion de los pueblos y nacionalidades indigenas, entendiendo esta como “el derecho que tienen las nacionalidades de elegir su sistema politico y juridico asi como su modelo de desarrollo economico, social, cientifico y cultural, en un territorio geograficamente definido dentro del marco de la nueva Nacion Plurinacional”.

Asi mismo, el evento de la CONAIE tratara sobe los recursos naturales y el desarrollo. Actualmente, se han presentado una serie de conflictos con relacion a la explotacion del petroleo, la mineria, la biodiversidad, el agua, los proyectos hidroelectricos, etc. Las empresas mineras, extranjeras y nacionales, tienen cerca de 4000 concesiones, varias de las cuales estan ubicadas en territorios indigenas. En la fase de exploracion, varias empresas han dividido a las comunidades y han provocado enfrentamientos. El gobierno de Rafael Correa ha planteado renegociar los contratos con las mineras buscando una mejor participacion economica del Estado y el respeto del medio ambiente. Las organizaciones indigenas, campesinas y ecologistas, estan opuestas a la presencia de las transnacionales basadas en las catastroficas experiencias de comunidades de otros paises latinoamericanos.

“En este congreso estara en discusion precisamente los recursos naturales, especialmente la politica petrolera y minera en este pais que no ha cambiado todavia para nada, yo creo que hay que revisar los contratos, que hay que revisar las concesiones, no pueden seguir las cosas como estan , de tal forma de que (reiteramos) la propuesta de la CONAIE de que hay que nacionalizar los recursos naturales, deben estar administrados por el Estado y no deben estar mas en manos de las companias transnacionales que han vulnerado la soberania nacional y la dignidad de los pueblos donde estan asentados estos recursos”, senalo Macas.

Al hacer un balance de su gestion, Macas senalo que se ha mantenido la unidad y se posicionado nuevamente a la CONAIE, luego de enfrentar la intromisiones de agentes externos, que, sobre todo en el gobierno de Lucio Gutierrez, intentaron debilitar y dividir a la organizacion. Asi mismo, destaco que se la logrado algunas victorias como la no firma del Tratado de Libre Comercio con Estados Unidos y la salida de la transnacional petrolera Occidental, acciones en las que el movimiento indigena tuvo una destacada participacion.

La CONAIE, de otra parte, elegira un nuevo Consejo de Gobierno cuyo mandato durara tres anos (2008 ­ 2010), incluyendo la designacion de las siguientes dirigencias: Fortalecimiento Organizativo, Mujer y Familia, Territorios y Recursos Naturales, Comunicacion, Juventud, Educacion y Cultura, Salud y Nutricion y Relaciones Internacionales. Debido a prohibiciones estatutarias, Luis Macas no podra ser reelecto como presidente.


Asamblea anuncia regulación de sector minero
11:56 | Según Alberto Acosta la Constituyente pretende establecer un mandato para regular concesiones mineras con empresas extranjeras.
OPINE SOBRE LA NOTICIA

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A BRIEF HISTORY OF RESISTANCE TO MINING IN INTAG, ECUADOR

By , January 1, 2008
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MITSUBISHI AND THE WORLD BANK COME TO INTAG
(updated jan/08)

Exploration for metallic minerals intensified in the Junín area with the arrival of Bishimetals in the early 1990s. Junín is a community located in Intag, a 1,500 km2 expanse of cloud forests and farms in northwestern Ecuador (Cotacachi County, Imbabura Province). Bishimetals, a subsidiary of Mitsubishi Corporation, received financing from the Japanese International Cooperation Agency (JICA) to explore for minerals in Junín. The effort led to the discovery of large deposits of copper and other minerals in the Junín-Cuellaje project area, located in the exceptionally biodiverse Toisán Range.

Interest in the mining potential of Intag was further fanned by the Project for Mining Development and Environmental Control (Spanish acronym: PRODEMINCA), financed with a loan from the World Bank (now part of Ecuador’s foreign debt) and implemented in the second half of the 1990s. The principle objective of the PRODEMINCA project was to promote industrial mining in Ecuador. It sought to achieve this goal by: a) modifying Ecuador’s mining legislation to make it much more pro-industry; b) to produce maps of Ecuador’s mineral deposits (thus saving mining companies the time and money in locating minerals). The World Bank has provided the same “service” to dozens of so-called developing countries. DECOIN presented a formal complaint against the Prodeminca project which resulted in a full-scale investigation by the Inspection Panel. However, by this time the project was near its end, and thus too late to modify. One of the most troublesome aspects of the project was that it prospected in seven national parks. This was just one of the many irregularities that came to light as a result of DECOIN’s successful challenge.

Ecuador’s mining law now offers the following incentives to mining companies: No royalty whatsoever, environmental compliance in the hands of the Ministry of Energy and Mines, the right to repatriate 100% of profits, minimal provisions designed to protect the rights of labor and communities or to mitigate and correct damage to the natural environment. The law further gives companies the right to use any and all resources within the concession needed for mining; this includes water, which is required (and polluted) in massive quantities during mineral processing. Compensation for privately owned resources (only subsoil minerals belong to the concession holder) is determined by the Ministry of Energy and Mines; farmers dissatisfied with the decision of this entity do not have the right to appeal to a court of law.

WHAT BISHIMETALS DID DURING ITS STAY IN JUNIN

Bishimetals paid little attention to the laws of Ecuador while exploring in Junín. Among the most serious violations, the company:

  • neglected to prepare an EIS prior to exploration (the EIS quoted below was prepared for the production phase);
  • neglected to inform communities about the project;
  • neglected to consult communities affected about whether they wanted the project;
  • built its latrines right on the banks of the Junín River and dumped its garbage into the river, which happens to be the major source of water for communities downriver;
  • damaged private property during drilling;
  • contaminated the Junín River during drilling, thus causing skin diseases in the local population.

Defensa y Conservación Ecológica de Intag (DECOIN), a local environmental organization founded in response to the mining threat, lodged repeated complaints about these and similar situations to the Ministry of Energy and Mines (MEM). Employees of the MEM could never find evidence of wrongdoing.

HOW MUCH COPPER IS THERE IN INTAG?
Eventually, Bishimetals discovered mineral deposits in three of Intag’s seven townships (Parish governments). According to JICA, mineralized areas in the Toisán Range contain 318 million tons of copper ore, with a 0.7% concentration. In other words, the Toisán Range will yield a total of 2.26 million tons of pure copper. Molybdenum is also present in a concentration of 0.03%, and there are traces of gold and silver in the ore.

How much copper is 2.26 million tons? Not enough to satisfy the annual demand of China, whose citizens consume three million tons per year. Not even enough for the United States, where people consume 2.3 million tons per year.

ASCENDANT is saying the inferred deposit is approximately 3 times the above amount. They based this on their own “in-house” evaluation.

An interesting bit of data: on average, 75% of all minerals produced in Latin America is exported to the industrialized North. What stays in the South is the devastation resulting from the mining of those minerals. Bishimetals’ scientists predicted the devastation that Junín would suffer if the copper there were ever mined.

ENVIRONMENTAL AND SOCIAL CONSEQUENCES OF COPPER MINING IN JUNIN
According to Bishimetals’ scientists, the open-pit copper mine in Junín will produce severe environmental and social impacts.
As noted, the Junín concession is located in the Toisán Range. This area was recently (2005) recognized as an Important Bird Area of South America by Birdlife International. The copper lies under farming communities and primary forests adjoining the Cotacachi-Cayapas Ecological Reserve, one of the world’s most biodiverse protected areas. The Toisán is exceptionally rich in water resources, upon which farmers downstream rely, and its primary forests are within two of the world’s 34 biological hotspots (the Tropical Andes and the Chocó-Darien-Western Ecuadorian). Biological hotspots are areas noted for exceptional levels of biological diversity and exceptional numbers of endemic species, and their biodiversity is severely threatened. The Andean Biological Hotspot, the area where the mine would be located, is known as biologically as the hottest of all 34 hotspots. In 1997, the world renown biologist E.O. Wilson wrote a letter to DECOIN pointing out the biological importance of Intag’s forests and of conserving them.
According to JICA’s preliminary Environmental Impact Study (EIS), forests, farms and water resources throughout the Toisan Range would be severely impacted by the planned copper mine. Among the environmental impacts predicted by Bishimetals’ scientists:
massive deforestation leading to drying of the local climate and desertification (his is almost literally what the EIS says) contamination of water sources by lead, arsenic, cadmium and chromium (metals associated with the copper ore) in levels up to 100 times greater than those naturally existing;

  • the flight of large mammals due to noise pollution from dynamiting the ore;
  • Impacts to the habitat of dozens of bird and mammal species in danger of extinction (including Jaguars, Spectacled Bears, Brown-headed Spider Monkey, Mountain Tapirs and several species of birds)
  • Impacts to the Cotacachi-Cayapas Ecological Reserve (similar to a Wilderness Area)

JICA’s scientists also predicted a series of social impacts:
the “relocation” of at least 100 families from four communities whose farms and homes are in the way of the proposed mine and related infrastructure;
the creation of a mining town of 5000 inhabitants (the largest population centers in Intag, where the largest villages are seven parish seats, each with fewer than 500 inhabitants);
increased crime and traffic accidents;

Scientists predicted these impacts after discovering only a small portion of the copper said to exist in the Junín concessions. It is likely that if more copper is mined, more widespread and severe impacts will result.

COMMUNITY RESPONSE
The mere presence of Bishimetals in Intag produced significant impacts. People began to learn about the impact of mining on forests and communities. Then, alarmed by what they learned, people began to organize. Thus was DECOIN founded. Through DECOIN, often in coordination with other national and international non-governmental organizations (NGOs) working in the fields of human rights and the environment, residents in the communities immediately threatened and throughout Intag began to mobilize.

Local opposition to the mining project finally resulted in the burning of Bishimetal’s mining camp on May 15, 1997. Hundreds of local residents from seven communities participated in the protest. The government singled out three community leaders for prosecution. Eventually the charges were dropped. Finally, after recommending that further studies be done in the hope of identifying more copper and thus making the mine more attractive to investors, Bishimetals pulled out of the project.
Victory was sweet, while it lasted.

RESISTANCE TO MINING GROWS
Between 1997 and 2002, in spite of the absence of an immediate threat, the opposition to mining in Intag increased dramatically. This was due, primarily, to the growing awareness about how human well-being requires a healthy natural environment and about the destructive nature of mining, in social, economic and environmental terms. DECOIN was key in creating this awareness, and also in creating and/or supporting alternatives to mining, such as the Río Intag Agroartesanal Coffee Growers Association (AACRI), women’s craft groups and community tourism projects. During this same period, the Cotacachi County Government passed an ordinance declaring Cotacachi an “ecological county” where mining and other activities incompatible with the conservation of natural resources are forbidden. DECOIN was the instigator for this unique local law, which sets down the basic plan for a sustainable economic and social base in Cotacachi.

As a result of environmental consciousness raising, Intag was ready for the next round in the anti-mining struggle: the Ministry of Energy and Mine’s (MEM) auction of the Junín concessions. In spite of protests by the presidents of the six parish governments of Intag, most community boards and more than 20 organizations working in the county, the MEM not only went ahead with the auction on August 15, 2002, but awarded the concession to Roque Bustamante, the only bidder, a trafficker in mining concessions, who paid $18,005 for the right to mine 7,000 hectares for 30 years.

The mayor of Cotacachi, with the backing of parish governments, grassroots organizations and the majority of residents, took the MEM to court in 2003. According to the plaintiff, the auction violated article 88 of Ecuador’s constitution which requires that local communities be consulted before the onset of activities that are likely to affect the natural and social environment. The judge who heard the case agreed. Bustamante appealed to the nation’s Constitutional Tribunal. Two of the three judges on the panel assigned to the case once again decided in favor of county government and the communities of Intag, but because it was not a unanimous decision, the case went to the court’s full nine-judge bench. There, after less than 24 hours, five judges decided against the county and in favor of the defendant, which by this time is a Canadian mining firm, Ascendant Exploration, the company to which Bustamante his sold rights to the concessions in Junín while judicial proceedings to decide the legality of the auction were underway.

IN MAY OF 2005, the Municipaliy of Cotacachi presented another lawsuit in the Administrative Court to have the concessions overturned, using similar arguments.

On September 2006, the president of Junin presented yet another constitutional injunction against the Junin mining project asking the courts to stop the government from approving Ascendant’s Environmental Impact Study. The final resolution is still pending.

One of the legal remedies pending is to take the case to the Organization of American State’s Interamerican Commission for Human Rights.

AND NOW WE HAVE ASCENDANT
As noted, Roque Bustamante sold his rights to the Junín mining concessions to Ascendant Exploration, a company based in Quito whose main objective, according to their web page, is to “hold” mining concessions for foreigners. The parent company is Ascendant Holdings, based in the Caribbean islands of Turks y Caicos. Later on, yet another Ascendant was created: Ascendant Copper Corporation, with the objective, according to the company, of mining Junín’s copper. Ascendant, it’s worth noting, is too small to open a mine as large as the one in Junín. DECOIN suspects their real goal is to try to destroy the opposition to the project and then sell the concession to one of the “majors.”

Ascendant’s arrival has coincided with conflicts in the communities directly affected and throughout Intag. Here are just a few examples of clashes between anti-mining residents and company supporters.

Ascendant employees tried to establish a camp in Junín’s community forest reserve contrary to the wishes of residents; they were forced to leave by a women’s group from Junín.
Numerous death threats to anti-mining activists.

In November 2004, three anti-mining residents, including a woman who heads a crafts group, were assaulted by bodyguards employed by pro-mining ex congressman during a public meeting organized by Ascendant. The attacks occurred when the bodyguards tried to forcefully take a camera away from one of the victims containing a photo of General Villacis.

DECOIN and some of its members have received death threats and have been victims of a nasty smear campaign which includes a web page intended to discredit the environmental organization’s members.

CODEGAM, the false organization created by Ascendant, bussed dozens of people to the Cotacachi Municipality in April 2005 to violently demonstrate against the Mayor for supporting the opposition to mining.

In October of 2005, CODEGAM again disrupted a public assembly called by the Garcia Moreno Parish government, forcing the president of the Parish to cancel the event.

On several occasions, CODEGAM followers blocked roads when community leaders and organizations opposed to mining tried to meet.

LAWSUITS: Ascendant initiated over a dozen lawsuits to date, in its strategy to intimidate and wear out the opposition, including one against the Periódico INTAG for a million dollars, which the company dropped a few months later.

Lawsuit presented against Carlos Zorrilla 2 days after Ascendant’s camp was torched by local residents, by a man had sold his land to the company, accusing Mr. Zorrilla of threatening him and others that if they sold the land to the company they would all be killed (this too was dropped) Several lawsuits presented by the company or its employees against anti-mining activists as a result of actions taken by community members to protect their lands and their rights. In all, to date (10-06), there are six active criminal lawsuits involving 20 persons from the communities.

Completely false accusations filed by Leslie Brooke Chaplin against Carlos Zorrilla in July 2006 for supposedly instigating a crowd to steal Ms Chaplin’s camera and assaulting her. It is believed Ms Chaplin was working for the company at the time of the accusation. She left for the US shortly after filing the malicious lawsuit. The false accusations led to arrest and search warrants issued against Carlos, and resulted in a police raid to Carlos’ house early in the morning of 17 of October, where the police planted a gun and drugs in his house. Carlos was not home at the time of the raid and was able to go into hiding. The incident took place in front of the Ministry of Energy and Mines where about 400 Intag residents were demonstrating to pressure the Ministry to force Ascendant to leave the Intag area.

November-December 2006: Clashes with Paramilitaries (See Updates below)

July 2006 saw the presence in the Junin areas armed personnel identifying themselves as members of the Ecuadorian Army Corps of Engineers. Some of these persons were involved in death threats against a local community activist. When this was denounced to the heads of the Corps of Engineers they said they did not send anyone to the Intag area and are investigating. Decoin has denounced this new human rights violation to human rights organizations and the nation’s ombudsman. This is only the latest of many instances of intimidation community and Decoin activists have suffered in the past few months.

Ascendant’s strategy to convince locals that mining has included all kinds of false offers to communities and organizations. According to an earlier $16.5 million “community development proposal” mining will bring only good things to Intag. The project includes 30 kilometers of road building and maintenance; new bridges over two rivers; a fully equipped and staffed health clinic; an ambulance; 1,000 new homes; computers for 37 grade schools; a new high school, and training in organic agriculture. Needless to say, the project was tied in to the community’s acceptance of the mining project.

TO DO SOME OF THEIR DIRTY WORK, Ascendant created the false “community development” organization, CODEGAM, which has been accused of all kinds of divisive and illegal actions by local residents. CODEGAM publicly admitted in 2005 that all their funding came from Ascendant Copper Corporation (July 2005 El Comercio Article). As of August 2006, Codegam was inoperable because of in-fighting, and in early 2007, it broke off relations with the company, citing unwillingness to comply with previous agreements with the company. As of September 2007, CODEGAM was replaced by ODI, another company-made “development organization”.

POLITICAL ACTIVITIES. In one of their first assemblies, CODEGAM publicly called on its followers to not respect the Mayor of Cotacachi; called for the creation of a new Municipality; asked Ascendant to stop all negotiations with the Municipality of Cotacachi; asked that Mr. Zorrilla (at the time DECOIN’s president) and three other foreigners be expelled from Ecuador. Afterwards, using Ascendant funds, they paid for soccer uniforms with a message supporting the creation of a new Municipality. Furthermore, there is evidence that Ascendant gave money to a political party in the Intag area who supported mining.

INTERNATIONAL CAMPAIGN: Local opposition is not the only used against the mining project. In May 2005, DECOIN, along with Friends of Earth Canada and Mining Watch Canada presented a claim against the mining company for violation of the OECD’s Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises. In January of 2006, we decided to withdraw the complaint because we felt there was a total lack of willingness and transparency in the process carried out by Canadian authorities.

The Toronto Stock Exchange: In spite of a determined campaign by DECOIN, Friends of Earth Canada and Mining Watch Canada to alert the regulators in Canada in charge of overseeing listing in the Canadian Stock Exchanges of all the irregularities related to Ascendant Copper Corp, they allowed it to go public in November 2005. This includes dozens of official documents from community presidents, the Mayor of the County of Cotacachi, a prestigious US law firm, pointing out innumerable instances of misinformation in the prospectus meant to mislead potential investors. To illustrate, the prospectus wildly under reported the magnitude of the opposition by most local communities and the government of Cotacachi to the mining project and to the presence of the mining company.

Chalguayacu Bajo, December 10th 2005
The fact is, that the opposition is so fierce that it led to the burning down of Ascendant’s mining camp on the 10th of December 2005. Close to 300 local residents from approximately 15 communities gathered in Chalguayacu Bajo that morning and assumed all responsibility for the collective action. No arrests were made, but Ascendant officially asked the district prosecutor to investigate, and named 24 local residents as possible guilty parties. In addition it named DECOIN’s Carlos Zorrilla as the brains behind the torching of the camp. It’s important to point out that no one was hurt during the deed, and absolutely nothing was stolen from the premises. To date (August 2006), the legal process is still in the investigative phase, and the case may soon go to court, with four of the most effective community activists still named in the lawsuit.

TO DATE and thanks to local opposition, Ascendant Copper Corporation has been unable to access the key mining areas to carry out the Environmental Impact Study necessary for them to do the exploration. Every time they’ve tried, community members from Junín and other nearby communities have stopped them. In early January 2006, the company claimed they were ready to undertake the long-awaited Environmental Impact Studies by first going to the communities to get their input. However, the communities most affected by the mining project have stated they do not want Ascendant on their lands (see updates below).

April 2006: The communities have blocked Ascendant from going into the communities most at risk by the project, even as Ascendant is trying to socialize its environmental impact study, which was done without the communities knowing about it. The communities hold that the company responsible for it didn’t do it in the mining site, since it’s an area controlled by the community of Junin. Daimi Services was hired in January to convince the people of the benefits of the project and to socialize the EIA. However, there has been dramatic resistance to the presence of Daimi. In February, communities blocked a forum organized by Daimi and Ascendant. The previous week, two Daimi employees were taken to Junin by community activists as a way to pressure Daimi to leave the area. No one has been arrested as a result of this latest community action, though five activists were accused by Ascendant of kidnapping. It’s worth noting that the indigenous community of Sarayaku officially asked Daimi to leave their territories due to the aggressive way they executed the community relations programs, and there were accusations of bribery.

CODEGAM officially broke relations with Ascendant on February 17, 2006, and at one point wanted to join with the anti-mining forces to force Ascendant to leave Intag. CODEGAM called on several government institutions to investigate Ascendant, and to revoke its mining concessions.

May 20th 2006, nearly 800 men, women and children, joined all seven Parish presidents, as well as legitimate representatives from most of Intag’s communities and NGO’s in a regional Assembly, where firm anti-mining measures were adopted, including asking Ascendant to leave Intag. The company, at its own peril, has chosen not to abide by this massive demonstration of rejection.

SUCCESSFUL MARCH TO QUITO.
On July 12 and 13th 2006, approximately 600 intag residents traveled to Cotacachi, and then to the nation’s capital, to march to the Ministry of Energy and Mines and the offices of the company, to let the Ministry and the rest of Ecuador know they will not allow mining in Intag. The protesters were led by Parish government presidents and the indigenous Mayor of Cotacachi. The Minister met with a delegation and promised to make sure the company was complying with all laws, and force it to abandon the project if not. To date (10-06), the Minister has not issued any statement regarding promises made.

August 2006: As stated above, several lawsuits and administrative legal processes are being presented by DECOIN as well as community and Parish presidents to declare the concessions illegal, and to legally challenge other aspects of this illegitimate project. Currently, the company is socializing what they consider to be their Environmental Impact Statement for their Junin project, in spite of the presence of several glaring illegalities connected to it.

September 2006: The government of Imbabura Province voted to ask the national government to stop Ascendant from carrying out any exploration or exploitation activities within the Junin mining concession. With this decision, all local governments having any jurisdiction over the Junin mining project have publicly announced their opposition to Ascendant Copper Corporation’s mining project.

Using the courts: In an effort to intimidate the opposition, approximately 12 criminal lawsuits have been filed by Ascendant and/or its employees against approximately 50 community members opposed to the mining project. As of April 2007, the company has lost all the cases that have reached the courts.

OCTOBER 2006: In October 2006, 19 heavily-armed police raided the home of Carlos Zorrilla based on trumped up charges filed by a person believed to be a Ascendant employed. The police took advantage of the raid to steal hundreds of CD’s with personal information, as well as information on Carlos’ environmental work with DECOIN. One of the police also planted a gun and some drugs in his home, leading to other criminal charges. Carlos avoided arrest until the arrest warrant was revoked, and as of April 2007, all charges have been dropped for lack of evidence.

For accounts of the police raid see:

EVENTS OF NOVEMBER AND DECEMBER 2006
November 2006
On November 1st, about 50 persons carrying machetes, tear gas and attack dogs, tried violently to go into the Barcelona-Cerro Pelado area. Despite the risk of confronting paramilitaries, who used the tear gas against unarmed community members (including a 3-year-old child) the communities stopped them. In the struggle, Vicente Quiguango, of the Villaflora community was run-over by a vehicle belonging to the company. Some of the paramilitaries in this incursion would again be seen in Intag 30 days later.

THE USE OF PARAMILITARIES
On December 2, 2006 several dozen armed guards tried to gain entry to Ascendant’s concessions. They were stopped at the Junin road control, which was manned by community members, and were told they could not proceed any further. Without any provocation whatsoever the guards, led by the international security firm Honor and Laurel, used pepper spray and fired their guns indiscriminately at the unarmed community members, wounding one of them in the leg (the attack was videotaped and photographed). The attack was repelled by the communities, and three days later 56 of the estimated 120 armed guards thought to be in the area, were captured by over 100 of the nearly 300 Intag residents who by then had arrived to Junin from all parts of Intag to support the community. The guards were all ex-military. The company also hired an army helicopter to provision the guards with food.

Ascendant later claimed they didn’t hire the guards, who the Quito-based human rights organization CEDHU, labeled paramilitaries, but that they were hired by Falericorp, a company contracted by Ascendant to supposedly work on agricultural projects. Later it was found that Falericorp was not only not an agricultural company, but that they were operating illegally in the country since 2004. The same was discovered about Honor and Laurel, and most organizations or companies Ascendant’s hired to work in Intag.

More aggressions: On the 6th of December, a large delegation composed of nearly 300 persons from Intag and the highlands of Cotacachi along with the Mayor of the county and the governor of Imbabura province were viciously attacked by crowd of about 50 pro-mining persons, when they were on their way to the community of Junin to officially receive the captured guards. The pro-mining crowd threw thousands of rocks, Molotov cocktails, burning tires and shot at the delegation, wounding several of them (including two Decoin representatives) In order to avoid an escalation of the violence, the trip was cancelled. Three days later, representatives from the national government, as well as the Mayor of Cotacachi, arrived by helicopter in Junin and the 56 guards were turned over. Later, as some of Intag’s residents were leaving this event in Junin, pro-mining personnel attacked them, wounding three of them with machetes, and sticks.
(For more information on the events that took place November and December 2006, please see HYPERLINK “http://www.decoin.org” www.decoin.org)

MORE UPDATES:
March 2007: Community representatives turned over the guns taken away from the paramilitary force in December of 2006 to police officials in the village of Chalguayacu Alto. One of the police officials expressed his grave concern over the possibility Ecuador becoming another Colombia in light of Ecuador of the paramilitary presence.

April 2007: In March, the opposition peacefully took over Ascendant’s camp in Chalguayacu Bajo, and the company was forced by the government to reduce its workforce by 70% as a consequence of community pressure. The communities then turned over the guns confiscated from the armed paramilitaries to government officials, and agreed with the government to take down its road controls. The company, however, is still prohibited by the communities from entering the mining site. Ascendant’s Environmental Impact Study has not yet been approved.

Near Lynching
On July 2007, Polivio Pérez was nearly lynched in Garcia Moreno by a mob comprised, in part, of Ascendant Copper employees. He was saved by the presence of the police, but the mob destroyed his motorcycle. Based in part on this incident, Amnesty International issued an Urgent Action request, calling attention to the threats that anti-mining activist face in Intag. As of January of 2008, Polivio is under 24 hour police protection.

Lawsuits: As of September 2007, charges against Carlos Zorrilla were dropped for both, the original robbery, and illegal possession of firearms charges due to lack of evidence. The drug issue is still pending, however (the District Attorney has not charged him, and has 2 years to decide). Two other court cases were lost by the company in Imbabura courts and were ruled inadmissible- so that, to date (Jan 2008) the company and its followers, has lost all of the court cases it has brought against community members.

September-October 2007: In September, the Ministry of Mines and Petroleum ordered Ascendant to suspend all its activities, including its agricultural work within its Intag concessions. The suspension is still in effect, and it forced Ascendant to fire all of its officials employees working in Intag. There are a few locals who we believe are still under contract with Ascendant, but no way to prove it. Nevertheless, the tension was reduced drastically.

In October, the company lost title to 17 of its properties around the Junin area when a government institution annulled the ownership rights due to illegalities discovered as part of an investigation launched by the government’s Anti-Corruption Commission. The company lost perhaps close to a million dollars and nearly 3,000 acres (1,200 hectares) of land they had purchased to try to gain access to the concessions.

Smear Campaign: In the meantime, the company continues with its smear campaign against organizations in Intag, but specially targeting Decoin and Prodeci (Prodeci is a Spanish-funded NGO). Likewise, Carlos Zorrilla and Polivio Pérez were targeted in late 2007 for a personal smear campaign, which involved the production of a calendar with a strong anti-Decoin message.

BAD COMPANY
In addition to all of the above, there are many other reasons to view Ascendant and its crew with a healthy dose of skepticism. These include:

Chris Werner, Ascendant Exploration’s first Chief Financial Officer, was fined by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for illegal trading of stocks in 1998. According to the SEC’s decision, Werner was involved in a company called Aqua Buoy with Joseph and Constance Pignatiello, in which the couple named “made materially false and misleading statements concerning the Company’s financial condition and sold their own Aqua Buoy stock at inflated prices.”

It is probably only a coincidence that Mr. Werner became involved with a company whose estimate of its assets (copper ore) some believe to be inflated. To whit, though it has yet to do any studies beyond those done by Bishimetals, Ascendant claims that there is more than three times the copper ore estimated by the Japanese company. According to a letter written on December 15, 2004 by Dr. Al Gedicks, addressed to the Finance and Audit Committee of the Toronto Stock Exchange, Ascendant’s figure is so far beyond the original estimate “as to raise serious questions of misleading and inaccurate information provided to stockholders.”
Among retired Ecuadorian military personnel once associated with Ascendant’s top management is Gen. César Villacís, a man who believes that those in favor of human rights, indigenous rights and workers’ rights are part of a “triangle of subversion;” It comes as no surprise that the general is a graduate of the School of the America’s, now located in Fort Benning, Georgia, where some of Latin America’s worst human rights violators have been educated, and that he was also involved in an illegal operation in 1997 related to a US petroleum company. He was also mentioned in a newspaper report (Nuevo Herald), as having taken part of illegal armament purchasing from Colonel Gaddafi ((note: as of Sept 05 Villacis was no longer working in the Intag area)) Paul Grist’s father is an adventurer-fortune seeker with prior dealings in Hampton Resources a Canadian mining company that owned concessions in the same area Ascendant Exploration now has concessions in Ecuador’s Amazon’s. The company went broke in 2004. Mr. Grist is one of Ascendant’s founders.

And then we have former congressman Ronald Andrade. Andrade, until early 2006 when he broke relations with Ascendant, was the mining company’s most vocal defender. His company-contracted bodyguards have been the protagonists of some of the incidents described above. Some of CODEGAM’s members have been involved or charged with several instances of intimidation death threats, and violent actions against public officials (Municipality of Cotacachi), etc

ALTERNATIVES TO MINING
Communities in the mining area and throughout Intag are developing alternatives to mining. For example, Junín owns a nearly 3,000 hectare forest reserve, the centerpiece of its Community Ecological Tourism project (located right over the mineralized area). Fifty men and women from two communities run the project.

AACRI- the Coffee Project. Junín, as well as the rest of Intag, also benefits from a shade-grown, fair trade coffee project, carried out by AACRI, a coffee grower’s association started by DECOIN in 1998, but now independent. AACRI has approximately 300 members growing sustainable coffee.

WOMEN’S GROUPS: Several groups have organized since the Mitsubishi camp bonfire seeking to institute their own form of development. This includes several women’s groups working in sisal handicraft, hand-made soap, etc.

TOISAN SOLIDARITY STORE: Another initiative born directly from this challenge, was the creation of the Toisan Solidarity Store. The Store, situated in Otavalo, sells products only produced by organized groups in the Intag area, and under FAIR TRADE premises.

These are only a few of the many sustainable projects residents have developed in response to the mining threat. These initiatives, and the model of sustainable development being created in Cotacachi County, are supported by a County ordinance, which in 2000, declared Cotacachi County the first Ecological County in Latin America. The Ordinance promotes local, community-based development, full respect for human rights; sustainable use of renewable resources and cultural and biological diversity, to mention a few of its objectives. In other words, a copper mine threatens far more than four communities, primary forests, endangered species and pristine rivers.

Community members from several communities adjacent to the mining area have expressed their intent to continue stopping them, and keep doing whatever it takes until Ascendant leave.

FOR MORE INFORMATION ON THE ISSUES DISCUSSED IN THIS SUMMARY, check updates on www.decoin.org, and:

Ascendant Alert
Intag Solidarity Network
Periódico INTAG’s web page

INFORMATION ON ASCENDANT: Ascendant’s web page and more company info.

If you would like to get in touch with us, write to:
DECOIN: decoin@hoy.net

There are many other excellent articles on this issue out there in cyberspace: just google decoin and intag

Junin’s email is: ecojunin@yahoo.es *
* For English, contact Decoin. Also note that the Community Council and Junín cannot regularly check their emails (no nearby phones). You can copy us and we’ll try our best to contact them.

DEFENSA Y CONSERVACIÓNDECOINECOLÓGICA DE INTAG
Casilla 144 Otavalo, Imbabura Ecuador
www.decoin.org
decoin@hoy.net
Tele/fax: 593 6 264 8593

DECOIN, is a grass-roots environmental organization founded in the Intag region in 1995. All members of DECOIN live in Intag. Our main objectives are: to conserve the area’s unique natural resources, with emphasis on forests, biodiversity and water, and to promote and support sustainable productive initiatives. One of our most important work has been building and supporting a strong opposition to mining activities by working closely with communities, organizations and local governments.

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Is Ascendant Keeping the Titanic Afloat?

By , December 11, 2007
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Ascendant Copper: Trying to Keep the Titanic Afloat?

The project is dead. And no amount of slick public relations campaign can bring it back.

A complete stop-work order for their Junin mining project, their so-called “nest egg”;

A nest egg with 17 less properties which the company lost recently (see prior blogs)

No environmental impact study- not even on the pipeline..

A self-evaluated drilling program analysis from their other Ecuadorian mining projects,

A possible buy-in with another mining company with no record of production, and a mine not worth throwing money on

A government hell-bent on totally revising the mining legislation to drastically reduce profits for the industry, much like it did with the petroleum industry (the last move was to take 99% of the industry’s windfall profits)

All local governments, and communities still adamantly opposed to the Junin project.

Recent archeological investigation confirming previous reports of a rich archeological zone within the Junin mining concessions (mining is illegal in archeological areas)

National mobilization against large-scale mining growing all over Ecuador

And from Ascendant and others like it, a lot of hype but nothing concrete and independently verified to show to the world.

In the meantime, the millions keep being spent, and no doubt the company will soon move to try to sell more shares to try to keep this Titanic afloat.

Does the name Bre-X mean anything?

Carlos Zorrilla

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