
San Salvador – Joined by grassroots and religious activists, residents from a score of communities in northern El Salvador ended here on Monday a three-day march to protest mining projects and the construction of a dam they say will wipe out homes and farms.
The march, which departed on Saturday from Amayo, some 55 kilometers (34 miles) north of San Salvador, was organized by peasants from Chalatenango province and had backing from several mayors and lawmakers with the country’s main opposition party, the leftist FMLN.
The Rev. Roberto Pineda, a Lutheran minister, told EFE that the aim of the March for Dignity and Life was to show the country’s rightist government “that it’s going to encounter firm and massive resistance” to the granting of mining permits to firms now engaging in exploration efforts in Chalatenango.
He added that “the communities know from international experience about the ravages caused by the installation of mines, which are … going to affect our entire population.”
Organizers said that some 5,000 people participated in the march, most of them peasants.
The march concluded on Monday without incident with a large gathering in front of the Economy Ministry that caused traffic tie-ups in the capital.
Members of the communities, along with FMLN leaders, met with Economy Minister Yolanda Mayora de Gavidia to deliver to her a letter in which they explained the adverse environmental and social effects that mining could cause for them.
In the letter, they demanded the immediate and definitive suspension of all exploration permits and concessions to exploit mines dug to date, as well as that the government take local residents into account when attending to the “needs of social development” and employ means that are compatible with the environment.
The demonstrators also protested the construction of the El Cimarron dam, which could cause the displacement of their communities and the flooding of their crops.
For his part, Environment Minister Hugo Barrera said that the government will not grant exploitation permits to firms requesting them if they do not guarantee that they will take care of the environment.
On Saturday, Barrera and De Gavidia announced that they will present to Congress a series of mining law reforms with the aim of tightening the requirements for exploiting mineral deposits.



