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Members of the Coordinadora de Comunidades de Sacapulas en Resistencia y en Defensa de los Recursos Naturales y el Medio Ambiente (Coordinating Committee of the Communities of Sacpulas in Resistance and in Defense of Natural Resources and the Environment), the body which organized the referendum, unfold banners in the central plaza of Sacapulas. Graham Hunt |
On May 20, 2011, in the fifth community referendum carried out in the department of El Quiché, 2
8,209 women, men and youth in the municipality of Sacapulas raised their voice* to pronounce a resounding NO to the entry into the municipality of national and transnational companies seeking to exploit mineral and hydraulic resources. 59.09% of the population took part in the historic decision, with women making up the majority of the adult vote and youth nearly 47% of the total. At the national level, to date, more than 660,000 Guatemalans have rejected the imposition of megaprojects in their territories via more than 60 community referenda.
*All the links in this report lead to http://consultasacapulas.tk3.net/, the official page of the referendum. Among other information, the page features a video, in Spanish and K’iché, documenting the process that led to the referendum, as well as the official, public information regarding area megaprojects that was provided to the communities of Sacapulas.
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Members of the Coordinadora de Comunidades de Sacapulas and volunteers put together the stage that will be occupied by the organizers of the referendum in the central plaza of Sacapulas. Graham Hunt |
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Members of the Coordinadora de Comunidades de Sacapulas prepare the vehicles that will carry national and international observers to the different communities of the municipality. Graham Hunt |
The process of awareness-raising that culminated in the community referendum was led by the Coordinadora de Comunidades de Sacapulas en Resistencia y en Defensa de los Recursos Naturales y Medio Ambiente (Coordinating Committee of the Communities of Sacapulas in Resistance and in Defense of Natural Resources and the Environment), a representative body made of of delegates from each microregion in the municipality. The Coordinadora was founded in response to the generalized popular concern that came into being with the popular knowledge, via public and official information from government ministries, of the existence of five mining licenses on lands belonging to the municipality, as well as mining and hydroelectric projects in neighboring municipalities likely to affect the population of Sacapulas. These megaprojects were approved without the free, prior informed consent of area communities.
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Images from the assembly carried out on April 9, 2011, in which the communities collectively decided to celebrate a referendum in the municipality of Sacapulas. Graham Hunt |
The Coordinadora having taken charge of sharing with the population the public information regarding the projects being developed over their communities, microregional assemblies were carried out throughout the municipality in which the population was consulted as to how to proceed in the face of the threat to their well-being. In each sector the decision was made to elevate the discussion to a forum involving all the communities and, in this way, in a universal assembly held on April 9, 2011, the communities of Sacapulas decided to submit the issue of extractive megaprojects in the municipality to a public referendum.
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As in the rest of the municipality, the population of the village of Tzununul expressed a round rejection of the extractive activities of national and transnational companies in the municipality. Graham Hunt |
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