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13/09/2011
In response to news of the murder of Father José Reinel Restrepo, parish priest of the municipality of Marmato in the department of Caldas, Colombia, we would like to express our deep concern that Canadian mining companies may well be aggravating or benefiting from violence in this area. In response, we ask the Canadian Embassy cooperate with investigations to ensure that the facts surrounding Restrepo’s murder are brought to light, and to guarantee that Canadian mining companies operating in Colombia are not causing, aggravating, or benefiting from violence and human rights violations.   Father Restrepo’s murder comes little more than two weeks after Prime Minister Harper celebrated the coming into effect of the Canada Colombia Free Trade Agreement in Bogotá. While those who put human rights before free trade have been accused of “protectionism,” this event once again raises the question about who needs greater protection: Canadian corporations or human rights defenders in Colombia standing up for collective interests in their communities.   On September 2nd, the body of Father Restrepo was found shot dead near his motorcycle on a road between the municipality of Belén de Umbría, Departamento of Risaralda and the municipality of Viterbo, department of Caldas, south of the municipality of Marmato. The 36 year-old priest had served for two years in the parish church of Marmato. No perpetrators in this crime have yet been identified, nor has a motive for Father Restrepo’s killing been determined.   In a communiqué, however, the Civic Committee for the Defence of Marmato, the Association of Small Scale Miners of Marmato, and the Regional Indigenous Committee of the Department of Caldas point out that Restrepo was an outspoken opponent to the development of an open-pit gold mine that would require the relocation of the entire town of Marmato. He had recently been on a trip to Bogotá in order to investigate information allegedly circulated by Medoro Resources, which recently merged with Toronto-based Gran Colombia Gold, saying that the parish church was up for sale.  
 “This Canadian multinational company wants to take advantage of the population; they want to drive them out.,” said Father Restrepo during a recent interview for a Colombian television special. They have even gone so far as to want to relocate the parish church, and they’ve come and asked me if I agree with the relocation of the town. I’ve ignored them, I’ve avoided them, and I’ve also responded saying, no. I’ve openly told them that I’m not in agreement with this.”   “The church is a defender of the poor, the church declares itself in defence of the poor, and the small scale miners of Marmato are at real risk of losing their jobs in this situation… The company doesn’t provide them with an alternative to their jobs because the company wants to use open-pit mining by displacing the population and exploiting this area in a short period of time.”
  The municipality of Marmato has historically relied on small-scale mining activities. Indigenous artisanal mining has taken place for centuries in this area, with afro-colombians and more recently other miners joining in.  Besides requiring relocation of the heritage mining town, the proposed large-scale open pit gold mine would compound pressures small-scale miners are already experiencing, having been being declared illegal by the Colombian State. Miners are being cut-off from the supply of explosives, forcing them to use home-made, unsafe techniques. This project also has impacts on ongoing land claims to the area by the Indigenous Embera people whom companies have not recognized.   The Canadian company Colombia Goldfields Ltd originally began working in Marmato in 2005, before Medoro Resources bought them out in 2010. Medoro Resources then merged with Gran Colombia Gold Corp in June 2011, a company in which the Canadian Pension Plan reports holdings of $6 million CDN. Gran Colombia Gold issued a statement on September 2nd with regard to Restrepo’s murder stating, “We hope the authorities will fully investigate this crime and swiftly establish what took place. The company reiterates our complete rejection of any acts of violence.”   Such statements are not enough.   Echoing the demands of committees, associations and Indigenous councils in Marmato and Caldas, we urge the Canadian Embassy to cooperate with all investigations into this matter in order to ensure that the facts surrounding Restrepo’s murder are brought to light. The Embassy should also encourage the company to cooperate fully. Furthermore, in light of the terms of the Canada Colombia Free Trade Agreement, which stipulate an annual report on associated human rights impacts, we also ask that the Canadian Embassy help guarantee that Canadian mining companies operating in Colombia, in the context of the ongoing internal armed conflict, are not causing, aggravating, or benefiting from violence and human rights violations. Finally, we ask that stronger mechanisms be put in place to hold Canadian companies to account in the context of armed conflict as an additional necessary step to signal that the Canadian government takes its human rights obligations seriously.   We look forward for your response and further communications with the Embassy in these regards.   Sincerely,   Atlantic Regional Solidarity Network The Canadian Union of Postal Workers Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) Christian Peacemaker Teams CPT Colombia Coalition québécoise sur les impacts socio-environnmentaux des transnationales en Amérique latine CoDevelopment Canada Colombia Action Solidarity Alliance (CASA) International Council of Latin American and Caribbean Women in Canada Latin American and Caribbean Solidarity Network Members of the Extractive Industries Research Group (EIRG), York University Members of the Executive Committee of The Centre for Research on Latin America and the Caribbean at York University (CERLAC) MiningWatch Canada Muslim Unity group Toronto Partners in Mission Unit, The United Church of Canada Projet Accompagnement Solidarité Colombie (PASC) Public Service Alliance of Canada (PSAC) The Steelworkers Humanity Fund Toronto Haiti Action Committee
This letter was sent to :

Ambassadrice Geneviève des Rivières Ambassade du Canada Apartado Aéreo 110067 Bogotá, Colombia (011 57 1) 657 9912 bgota-td@international.gc.ca
cc :

Angelino Garzón
Vicepresidente de la República de Colombia
Fax: (57 1) 596 0651 E-mail: contactovicepresidencia@presidencia.gov.co

Carlos Rodado
Ministerio de Minas crodado@minminas.gov.co

Germán Vargas LlerasMinistro de Justicia y del Derecho de Colombia PBX (+57) 444 31 00 Ext. 1820 e-mail: ministro@minjusticia.gov.co, reclamos@mij.gov.co

Alejandro Ordoñez Maldonado
Procurador General de la Nación anticorrupción@presidencia.gov.co, reygon@procuraduría.gov.co

Christian Salazar
Oficina de la alta comisionada de naciones Unidas para los derechos Humanoscsalazar@hchr.org.co

Catherine Pedreros
Oficina de la alta comisionada de naciones Unidas para los derechos Humanos cpedreros@hchr.org.co, oacnudh@hchr.org.co

Sr. Coordinador
Sub-Oficina de MedellínOficina de la alta comisionada de naciones Unidas para los derechos Humanos quejas@hchr.org.co, oacnudh@hchr.org.co

Wolmar Antonio Perez Ortiz
Defensor del Pueblo Fax: (+571) 640.04.91E-mail,secretaria_privada@hotmail.com, agenda@agenda.gov.co,defensoria@defensoria.org.co

Horacio Guerrero
Defensoría del Pueblo hguerrero@defensoria.org.co

Peter Volk
Gran Colombia Gold General Counsel and VP
pvolk@grancolombiagold.com