HomeNewsAnalysisCrackdown on Illegal Mining Won't End Ecuador's Gold Rush
Crackdown on Illegal Mining Won't End Ecuador's Gold Rush
ANALYSIS

Crackdown on Illegal Mining Won't End Ecuador's Gold Rush

ECUADOR / 16 JUL 2019 BY JAMES BARGENT AND MAYRA ALEJANDRA BONILLA EN

Thousands of police and military have swept through the north Ecuador district of Buenos Aires in an attempt to control the illegal mining boom that has ravaged the region, but it may be too late to stop the country’s criminal gold rush.

On July 2, 2,400 soldiers and police officers were deployed to Buenos Aires and tasked with driving out illegal gold miners, who by some estimates numbered as many as 10,000.

Over 2,700 miners voluntarily left the site, while a further 2,500 were driven away by security forces, reported El Universo. Among them were 1,395 Venezuelans and 906 Colombians, as well as several Dominicans, Argentines and a Haitian, reported El Telégrafo.

In the first days of the operation, police also made 26 arrests and seized over 700 grams of gold, 1,400 sacks of ore and two firearms, according to El Universo.

The authorities were finally provoked into taking drastic measures after a dramatic shootout between armed gangs left at least four wounded and two dead in late June, according to police officials. Shortly after the confrontation, President Lenín Moreno declared a state of emergency and launched the operation.

SEE ALSO: Ecuador News and Profile

Tensions have been building in the region since the arrival of heavily armed Colombian criminals in early 2019. While the identities of the Colombians are unconfirmed, a local miner, who did not want to be identified for fear of repercussions, claimed they were linked to organized crime structures in the Colombian city of Cali.

Police officials, meanwhile, showed InSight Crime text communications from one suspect talking about how they were going to “enter with the paracos” -- Colombian slang for paramilitaries and a term commonly used for the criminalized successor groups of Colombia’s demobilized counterinsurgents. The chat history includes photos of a small arsenal of high-powered weaponry.

Sources in the area report how the Colombians drove out the Ecuadorean gangs that had previously controlled extortion networks.

“The Colombians arrived here with rifles, so [the Ecuadoreans] ran away,” said the miner.

According to the miner, the Colombians called meetings in which they laid down the new rules for working and living in the area, which included daily fees for every person to enter the mining zone, fees to open a mine, fees to run a processing plant and a 10 percent cut of all mining operations.

With members of at least two different groups moving in on Buenos Aires, the miner, speaking in May 2019, predicted the violence to come.

“They will be friends until they have the zone under control, but when one starts earning more than the other, they are going to kill each other,” he said.

The operation has left Buenos Aires facing uncertainty over what will come next. The state of emergency will last for 60 days, and the government has yet to announce plans to keep control of the area in the long term. And while police operations continue, as of yet there is no sign the authorities have arrested gang leaders.

The uncertainty has also spread to neighboring areas. Community leaders in the nearby region of Intag, which have been involved in a long-running struggle against plans for large-scale mining projects in the region, report they now fear illegal miners as well.

Illegal mining operations have already been established in the Intag areas of Selva Alegre and Cuellaje. Community leaders that have opposed their arrival have received death threats, including one local council leader who was sent a video by WhatsApp purporting to show murders committed in Buenos Aires as a warning.

Leaders warn that the operation in Buenos Aires could see displaced miners heading to Intag.

“Since the eviction of the miners in Buenos Aires, they are again arriving to Intag, and the situation is getting more dangerous,” said José Cueva, a leader with the Intag environmental collective Corporación Toisán.

InSight Crime Analysis

The massive deployment of security forces in north Ecuador may spell the end of the Buenos Aires boom, but it is unlikely to be the end of illegal mining in the region.

The incredible riches on offer are likely to see miners return when the current unsustainable levels of security forces are reduced, even if the miners have to operate in a more clandestine fashion than before.

The likelihood of miners returning is also boosted by the rampant corruption that facilitated the arrival of illegal mining to the region in the first place. Multiple sources alleged to InSight Crime that police and local authorities up to the highest levels were making huge profits from the Buenos Aires mines.

As the situation in Intag shows, illegal mining is also poised to spread elsewhere, and not only in the immediate area. InSight Crime field research revealed a rapid growth in illegal mining operations throughout Ecuador’s northern border region, while officials voiced concerns that there are as yet untouched areas that could prove as rich in gold as Buenos Aires.

SEE ALSO: Large Deposit Brings Illegal Gold Rush to Ecuador

This new illegal mining boom in Ecuador coincides with a government drive to promote large-scale mining. Both legal and illegal mining now look set to expand side by side.

The exploratory work of mining companies allows illegal miners to identify target sites, and in the case of Intag, leaders suspect that locals that work for the mining company are passing information on to the illegal miners.

“In Intag we have seen people connected to the company later turn up also helping the illegals,” said Cueva.

Communities struggling to keep their territories free of mining of any sorts also fear the presence of illegal operations will also be used to justify the expansion of large-scale mining, which the government can then present as a far more preferable alternative.

These fears were stoked by recent comments made by the minister for energy, natural, non-renewable resources, Carlos Pérez García.

“There is going to be mining in this country one way or another,” he told the media in April. “Our decision is that there will be responsible mining and not illegal mining, which is effectively what damages the country.”

However, the national government may find that decision ultimately lies outside of their control.

Top Image: AP Photo

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