*[Enwl-eng] Divided by Gold

ENWL enwl at enw.net.ru
Sat Aug 12 16:14:31 MSK 2023


Divided by Gold  
                             
                                News of the world environment 
                             
                                 NEWSLETTER | AUGUST 11, 2023 
                             
                                  
                                 
                                 
                                  
                                 
                                 
                                  
                                 
                                 
                                 
                                 
                                 
                             
                       
                 
           
                                Divided by Gold
                                YEAR 2020.
                                 
                                Soccer, beers, barbecue, shared sweat, teamwork. Laughter. Nine people with yellow rubber boots and machetes in their hands smile at the camera. Others, as if it were choreographed, weed a section of jungle with their bare hands to set up the field. In the background, a machine turns and cement covers the bricks that will support the construction of a communal house. The roof is made of zinc. Several men raise a wooden pole on which they install an electricity box. All the photographs speak of the joy of shared labor and community.
                                 
                                “Those were our social events, which took place before the Chinese company poisoned the conscience of some residents,” says Patricio Villamil three years later while sending photos through WhatsApp. Villamil is the president of the community of Shiguacocha, a village of 50 families in the rural area of the Carlos Julio Arosemena Tola canton in the province of Napo in the Ecuadorian Amazon.
                                 
                                The company, Terraearth Resources, specializes in gold mining and has a 4,077-acre, small-scale mining concession in the region. Mineral extraction in Napo began more than 25 years ago. But between 2015 and 2023 it expanded by 300 percent.
                                 
                                “If we look back, the first mining companies came to settle in rural areas inhabited by Indigenous communities that did not know what they were coming to do and, in addition, had no education. Some of them did not even speak Spanish,” says Andres Rojas, Ombudsman of Napo.
                                 
                                “The companies arrived offering work, favors, and money. They made the elders put their fingerprints on permits, documents, and contracts, or they bought the land from them at ridiculous prices. The people began to divide between those who benefited from the newly arrived companies and those who witnessed the painful destruction of their land, their water, their habitat.”



                                This feature is the first of a three-part series (translated from Spanish) by journalist Gabriela Verdezoto Landívar that investigates and offers different points of view on gold mining in the Ecuadorian Amazon’s Napo province, where mining grew 907 percent between 2011 and 2021.
                                 
                                 
                             
                                READ MORE
                                  
                             
                                Photo of Napo River by Alexander Schimmeck
                                 
                             
                                 
                             
                                SUGGESTED BROWSING
                                  
                             
                                Extinction. Grief. Love.
                                “How are we to survive without our companion species on Planet Earth? We are not above them or below them — but side by side — fellow creatures caught in a web of uncertainty in this era of the Anthropocene.” Terry Tempest William reflects on the 50th anniversary of the Endangered Species Act. (Nautilus)  
                             
                                This Nut Travelled
                                They started off as a crop in the Andes some 10,000 years ago. Somewhere along the line, as they traveled across nations and continents, they began to be boiled. Today, the tale of the boiled peanut is a global love story that transcends space and time. (Bitter Southerner)  
                             
                                On Missing Animals
                                “Anyone who develops deep knowledge of other species by living alongside them for years realizes something both obvious and essential: We are not the only lives that matter.” But how many of us are really listening? (Emergence)  
                             
                                Healing Stories
                                Three years ago, an explosion of improperly stored ammonium nitrate, commonly used in fertilizers and for mining munitions, killed hundreds and injured thousands in Beirut. For Tamara Saade the only way to process the trauma from that day is through the stories of others. (The Delacorte Review)
                                   
                             
                                 
                             
                                Not a subscriber yet?

                                You can get 4 issues of our award-winning print magazine delivered for $20 ($25 for international addresses) by clicking this secure link.  
                             
                                 
                             
                                YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE!
                                Earth Island Journal is a nonprofit publication. Our mission is to inform and inspire action. Which is why we rely on readers like you for support. If you believe in the work we do, please consider making a tax-deductible donation to our Green Journalism Fund.
                                DONATE TODAY! 
                                 
                             
                                 
                             
                                 
                             
                                Send this to a friend: 
                             
                                  Share  
                                 
                                 
                                  Tweet  
                                 
                                 
                                  Forward  
                                 
                                 
                                 
                                 
                                 
                             

                                Did a thoughtful friend forward you our newsletter? Keep up with the latest from Earth Island Journal!
                                SIGN UP TODAY
                                  
                                 
                             
                       
                 
           
                                  Like the Journal  
                                 
                                 
                                  Tweet our Stories  
                                 
                                 
                                  Follow us on Instagram  
                                 
                                 
                                 
                                 
                                 
                             
                                You are receiving this email newsletter because you signed up on our website.
                                If this newsletter was forwarded to you, you can sign up to the email newsletter here.

                                Support our work by subscribing to our quarterly print magazine.  
                             
                                 
                             
                                Copyright © 2023 Earth Island Journal, All rights reserved.
                                You are receiving this email because you opted in via our website.

                                Our mailing address is:

                                Earth Island Journal
                                2150 Allston Way Ste 460
                                Berkeley, CA 94704-1375

                                Add us to your address book




                                  
                             
                       
                 


            From: Earth Island Journal 
            Sent: Saturday, August 12, 2023 3:44 AM
            Subject: Divided by Gold

           
     
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.enwl.net.ru/pipermail/enwl-eng/attachments/20230812/f2774355/attachment-0001.html>


More information about the Enwl-eng mailing list