The Christian Science Monitor

When mining companies work abroad, should justice follow them home?

Growing up, Irma Yolanda Choc Cac recalls hearing stories about the government-backed violence that tore apart her verdant, mountainous community of Lote Ocho. Her grandparents were killed there during Guatemala’s 36-year civil war, which took the lives of 200,000 people – most of them indigenous, like the Maya Q’eqchi residents where Ms. Choc Cac lives.

“I always thought, ‘How did that happen? If I’m ever in a situation like that, I will fight back,’” she says through a Q’eqchi’ interpreter, sitting by the calm waters of Lake Izabal in eastern Guatemala.

Since 2007, that pledge to stand up for her heritage and land has been put to the test.

Ms. Choc Cac and 10 women from her subsistence-farming community say they were gang-raped by police, military, and security personnel from the nearby Canadian-owned nickel mine as they were evicted from their ancestral lands outside El Estor. After the rapes – some of which the women say occurred in front of their children – their homes and belongings were burned to the ground.

“We were left without anything, sleeping under the mountains,” Ms. Choc Cac says, tugging on her purple

Crossing countriesCases in motion‘We could defend ourselves’

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Christian Science Monitor

The Christian Science Monitor5 min readAmerican Government
Trump Vows To Fire Bureaucrats. Here’s Why Biden Is Trying To Stop Him.
For decades, American presidents routinely offered government jobs to political allies – and expected those employees would do their bidding in return. Then in 1881, a campaign supporter who did not win such a favor assassinated President James Garfi
The Christian Science Monitor4 min read
Caregiving Burdens Fall On Women. This Nigerian Woman Wants To Change That.
It’s 7 a.m. on a Monday, and the clamor of automobile engines fills the air, the soundtrack of millions of Lagos residents heading to work. Kindergarten teacher Fatimoh Adeyemi is one of them. But first, she stops in front of a simple white stucco ho
The Christian Science Monitor4 min readInternational Relations
For Moscow, The War In Ukraine Is A Rerun Of World War II
The atmosphere around Victory Day on May 9, a holiday celebrating the anniversary of the Soviet Union’s victory over Nazi Germany in 1945, is always charged with martial fervor and a sense of Russia’s enduring resilience. The intensity almost makes i

Related Books & Audiobooks