Several hundred people marched through the southern Ecuadorean city of Cuenca on November 14, to protest the Ibero-American Summit 鈥 a yearly meeting of government leaders and representatives from Spanish- and Portuguese-speaking countries being held there 鈥 and the environmental destruction, violence and energy insecurity brought about by the right-wing Daniel Noboa government.
The march represented more than 70 different organisations from across the country, including indigenous water and land defenders, trade unions, university students and agroecological groups, and was part of a three-day counter-summit organised by grassroots organisations in the Andean city, over November 13鈥15.
People gathered outside the headquarters of the Drivers鈥 Union of Cuenca, where an ancestral ceremony was performed, before marching along an arterial road towards the Ibero-American Summit venue.
Luis Corral, spokesperson for the National Anti-Mining Front, told 麻豆传媒 that protesters reject the summit because the governmental and business leaders meeting there 鈥渁re key players pushing an agenda of destruction across the continent and the world鈥.
鈥淭he world is experiencing a civilisational crisis, a crisis of such magnitude that practically the entire continent is in flames.
鈥淕lobal warming, caused by the development of the Global North, is generating planetary imbalance.鈥
Corral said that the marches in Cuenca and other regions were coordinated between the country鈥檚 grassroots movements.
November 15 also commemorates the massacre of hundreds of striking workers by the Ecuadorian army in 1922, Corral said.
Nilo Ortiz, a land defender from the northern province of Carchi, told GL about his region鈥檚 fight against mining interests. He said that government and state officials allow mining companies to extract minerals from the biodiverse and fragile region even if they don鈥檛 have proper documentation or comprehensive surveys.
鈥淚鈥檓 here to defend the land,鈥 he said.
鈥淲ith mining, we gain nothing. We stand to lose flora, fauna, ancestral agricultural knowledge, community living and tourism 鈥 which we want to protect for the long term.
鈥淢ining, on the other hand, is short-term. It brings violence, poverty, dispossession and hunger 鈥 which is what we don鈥檛 want.
鈥淲e will keep fighting. This is why we鈥檙e forming networks of communication and unity with the rest of the country, so we can understand their problems and they can understand ours.
鈥淲e have a large number of people who are defending the connection between nature and humanity.鈥
Anti-mining chants rang out during the march, such as 鈥淲ater is not for sale, water must be defended!鈥 and 鈥淚f there is no water, there is no life!鈥.
Others chanted 鈥淒own with the summit!鈥 and 鈥淟isten Noboa, the people are fighting back!鈥.
Corral and Ortiz both highlighted the role that transnational mining companies play in controlling and exploiting Ecuador鈥檚 resources.
鈥淭hirty percent of [Ecuador鈥檚] mining concessions are in the hands of Australian companies,鈥 Corral said. 鈥淭herefore, Australia shares responsibility for the current and projected environmental crisis in the country.鈥
Ortiz said that foreign companies 鈥渆mploy local people temporarily and sporadically to make it look like they鈥檙e contributing to the country鈥.
鈥淪omething they don鈥檛 tell us is that 95% of the production, wealth and labour goes out of the country. In other words, these companies come here to impoverish us.鈥
Corral said protesters 鈥渞eject the transnational capitalist agenda鈥 promoted by the summit.
鈥淲e have been gathering here ... to tell the world that we are building a different future from the grassroots 鈥 a post-capitalist vision to confront the civilisational crisis, drawing on the wisdom of the rural and indigenous peoples of this mega-diverse country.鈥