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On December 30th, 2009, right after the murders of Ramiro Rivera and Dora Alicia Sorto in Cabanas, the U.S.
Embassy called a meeting with the members of the National Roundtable
Against Mining in El Salvador. Among the points in the meeting, the
Embassy representative told the Roundtable that they should not speak
about the role of Pacific Rim Mining Co in the recent murders in the regions where Pacific Rim had planned to mine in Cabanas.
Rodolfo Calles of the Roundtable said
“The Embassy told us that we should not call for an investigation into
the role of Pacific Rim in the murders unless we can give evidence to
their participation. But this is incorrect, our role is not to provide
evidence, we are not the Attorney General’s office, what we are doing
is calling on the Attorney General’s office to do a thorough
investigation. Until that investigation happens, it is not clear what
role Pacific Rim has had in the murders.”
The
U.S. Embassy’s decision to meet
with the Roundtable worries U.S. organizations that are working against
mining in El Salvador, as it represents one step that the U.S. Embassy
has taken to support Pacific Rim instead of staying neutral on the
issue.
U.S.-El Salvador Sister Cities worries that this may be evidence that Pacific Rim is lobbying the U.S. embassy, and that the U.S. Embassy will get more involved in
the
case in the future, siding with Pacific Rim.
The Pacific Rim Mining Co, which was
exploring in the region of Cabanas until 2009, is a Canadian company
with a branch in Nevada. Pacific Rim filed a suit against El
Salvador in 2008 through CAFTA, claiming that the recent governmental
decision to not allow mining violates their rights as investors
through CAFTA.
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