The video tells the story of Skye Resources, a Canadian Company based in Vancouver, in Guatemala.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q20YxkM-CGI
Skye Resources is creating hatred for Canada. It will be deeply etched in the minds of these Guatemalan children that CANADIANS destroyed their homes and their lands. The story will be handed from generation to generation. Festering, never healed. That’s the way of injustice. Once-happy people begin to carry poison in their minds. The examples from history are legend.
I have told you the story of visiting the Acadian Museum in Louisiana, Their ancestors were evicted from Nova Scotia in 1755. TWO HUNDRED AND FIFTY YEARS AGO. They have never forgotten. As I walked in the Museum and read the story of the “genocide committed by the English” I became more and more uncomfortable. These people hate me – – and I didn’t have anything to do with their tragedy. May the gods help us: this happened 250 years ago.
It will be the same for these people from Guatemala. They won’t forget.
Skye Resources is PEOPLE. The Board of Directors of Skye Resources is responsible. They are sowing the seeds of hatred.
The list of people on the Board is appended.
Should I just do nothing? … not when there is lots that CAN be done.
I invite you to join with me. Watch the YouTube video for starts. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q20YxkM-CGI
If you need more information, go to the Mining Watch web site: http://www.miningwatch.ca/index.php?/Skye
See below. I’ve appended an excellent letter from the MWatch web site, written to Skye Resources CEO, Ian Austin, by Victoria L. Henderson MA Candidate, Department of Geography, Queen’s University.
YOU AND I HAVE INVESTMENTS IN SKYE RESOURCES THROUGH CANADA PENSION PLAN.
I HAVE PROTESTED. IT ONLY TAKES A MINUTE.
Together we own 629,000 shares worth $8 million of Skye Resources stocks. (Scroll down at – – Link no longer valid – – http://www.cppib.ca/files/PDF/CDN_Equity_Holdings_March31_2007_-_ENG.pdf)
I’ve sent the CPP Investment Board (CPPIB) an email requesting them to disinvest. My email will be worth zippo without an email from some of you, too!
CPPIB has guidelines for ethical investing. It’s our money. They should take direction from us on whether or not we want to be party to the actions of Skye Resources.
EMAIL: csr AT cppib.ca
———————————————–
Skye Resources Inc.
1111 Melville Street
Suite 700
Vancouver, BC V6E 3V6 Canada
Tel: 604-602-9500
Fax: 604-602-9510
Email: info@skyeresources.com
WHO is Skye Resources? (Link no longer valid: http://www.skyeresources.com/corporate/board_of_directors)
Ian Austin – President and CEO.
(Link no longer valid)
621 26th Ave W
Vancouver, BC V5Z 2E5
(604) 733-2013
Gord Bacon, Bacon Donaldson & Associates
12271 Horseshoe Way’ Richmond, BC, Canada V7A 4V4; Phone: (604)277-2322; Fax: (604) 274-7235
Bob Horn, Robert Horn
2557 Killarney Rd
Victoria, BC V8P 3G6
(250) 383-3550
Terrence Lyons
David McIntyre
Sheila O’Brien (Link no longer valid)
12112 Schmidt Cres
Maple Ridge, BC V2X 8A2
(604) 467-9318
Ron Simkus, (Link no longer valid)
2151 Shaughnessy Hill
Kamloops, BC V1S 1B9
(250) 828-2434
David S Smith (Link no longer valid)
3125 Thacker Dr
Kelowna, BC V1Z 1X6
(250) 769-3273
“We all cannot be heros but we can do brave things” (Martin Luther King Jr)
LETTER TO SKYE RESOURCES FROM VICTORIA HENDERSON (Victoria is a Canadian hero!):
Thursday January 25, 2007 04:18 PM
Ian Austin, President and CEO
Skye Resources
Suite 1203-700 West Pender Street
Vancouver, BC
Canada, V6C 1G8
Dear Mr. Austin,
Thank you for taking the time to respond to my letter of 28 September 2006 regarding the activities of Skye Resources/CGN in El Estor, Guatemala. I appreciate your attempt to address my concerns and trust that you share my belief that Q’eqchi Maya peoples in El Estor deserve a reasonable and just resolution to the issues at hand.
When I visited Chichipate last August, community elders spent several hours explaining to me and my colleagues why they are opposed to your company’s plans to mine in El Estor. The list runs long and includes not only concerns over property rights and environmental damage, but also fears about a resurgence of the deplorable violence that marked Canada’s last mining experiment in the region. I refer here to the complicity of INCO/EXMIBAL in human rights abuses carried out during the 1970s and 1980s. As I am sure you are aware, Guatemala’s Comisión de Esclarecimiento Histórico or Truth Commission has documented EXMIBAL’s involvement in abductions, political killings, and multiple executions in Guatemala. Given that EXMIBAL was a majority owned subsidiary of INCO and that INCO is a key stakeholder in Skye Resources it is not difficult to understand why Q’eqchi peoples are concerned. The active participation of CGN employees in the most recent spate of land evictions in El Estor can only deepen this fear. Having spoken with colleagues returning from El Estor and having watched video footage of the “squatter” displacement, I must question your company’s description of the evictions as unfolding in a “peaceful atmosphere”. It would seem to me that there could be few things less peaceful than having one’s home torn down — or worse, burned down — by callous strangers, while a barrage of armed police officers watch on from the sidelines. The angry screams of a mother desperate to know where her now homeless children will sleep; the hopelessness of a man who can do nothing but bury his head in his hands and sob: these images provide a less than fitting testament to the “peaceful atmosphere” of which you speak. If you have not already seen video footage of the evictions, I encourage you to view it by visiting the following site:
The absence of gunfire should not be confused with peace. At its most basic level, peace requires the security of self and home — two things Maya peoples in Guatemala have historically and systematically been denied. In the interest of both corporate transparency and personal integrity, I respectfully request that you rescind your comments about the “peaceful atmosphere” of the evictions. Further, in place of using your company website to give thanks to the Guatemalan National Police for the “professional manner” in which it carried out the evictions, I urge you to join the international community and indigenous organizations such as CONIC (National Campesino and Indigenous Coordination) in demanding that the Guatemalan government make reasonable and just reparations to the affected communities. Despite your website’s statement to the contrary, the situation in El Estor has in no way been “resolved”.
Resolution in this case requires that outstanding issues be addressed. I ask for your consideration of the following six points of discussion, raised in your letter of 9 October 2006:
1 – WOOD COLLECTION
You have indicated that Skye/CGN allows those with “legal permits” to transport wood through company property. I would like to take you up on the offer of learning more about how this program works. As you know, I was told by the elders of several communities that Skye/CGN prohibits wood collection from traditional Q’eqchi lands. If nothing more than a formality separates indigenous communities in El Estor from collecting the wood they need, then this issue should be relatively easy to resolve.
2 – PROPERTY RIGHTS
According to your website, Skye Resources has entered into an agreement with the Guatemalan government to survey and document land holdings in El Estor in order to determine “exact property lines and tenure.” This strikes me as a serious conflict of interest on the part of Skye Resources. Further, it sends a combative message to indigenous peoples whose lands are in dispute. Not only should Skye Resources remove itself fully from the surveying process, but it should also cease exploratory activity until such time as “exact” property lines and tenure have been determined.
3 – LAND “DONATION”
I was told by the CGN Community Relations Team that “we” (meaning Skye/CGN) donated lands to Chichipate. I accept that you are not claiming credit for such a gift and that you are not prepared to comment on any land transactions that might have occurred during the INCO/EXMIBAL operation. Given that INCO is a key stakeholder in your company, however, I would ask your assistance in directing me to an appropriate contact at INCO in order that I may follow up on the land “donation” to Chichipate.
4 – RAXCHE’
It would be difficult to argue with the vision of Raxche’ that you outline in your letter. Improvements to the health and education of those living in the municipality of El Estor are of paramount concern. The problem, as I understand it from speaking with Q’eqchi elders, is that there is a significant breach between the Raxche’ vision and the Raxche’ reality. If there is one issue on which members of different local communities seem to agree, it is that Raxche’ is dividing indigenous people in the region. One hopes that this is not what Skye/CGN intended and that you will investigate in order to determine why this view seems so widely held. Your letter states that Raxche’ has five projects in Chichipate. Aside from painting the local basketball courts, which community elders acknowledge, I would appreciate if you could describe the nature of the other four Raxche’ projects in Chichipate.
5 – MAYA COSMOVISION
I respectfully submit that your understanding of Maya cosmovisión fails to appreciate the deep spirituality that links Maya peoples to the Earth. I have visited Cerro 400 and you are correct in stating that, had I not been told, I would never have known that the area had been mined and reforested. I, however, am not Maya. The idea that the earth can be gutted and covered over “as if nothing had happened” is wholly inconsistent with Maya cosmovisión. Pointing out how “natural” a site may look after it has been mined is to confound the deeply spiritual with the highly superficial. Moreover, it is to disrespect the history of Maya peoples. As one Q’eqchi gentleman explained at a public meeting on mining held this summer in El Estor: “They (foreigners) come and bulldoze our land. It hurts us a lot, because we have dedicated many hours and much sweat in working that land.” I understand that you have a job to do, Mr. Austin. However, I urge you, in carrying out your job, to remember this gentleman’s words. He was speaking as much to you as he was to me and to the others in El Estor.
6 – “COURTESY VISITS”
You have noted that it is the policy of the CGN Community Relations Team to pay “courtesy visits” to communities in the municipality of El Estor. It seems to me, however, that it is the communities themselves that extend the true courtesy by allowing foreigners onto community property and by consenting to dialogue about a project that threatens both a way of life and a means of survival.
In conclusion, let me say again that I appreciate your having taken the time to address my original letter. Your last correspondence indicates that Skye Resources seeks “to learn how to improve (its) consultation processes and to better understand how (it) is perceived” in Guatemala. To that end, it is my sincere hope that you take the opportunity to reflect on issues presented above; that you address each of the six points of discussion; that you rescind your comments on the “peaceful atmosphere” of the recent land evictions; and that you join those who demand that the Guatemalan government make reasonable and just reparations to the affected communities in El Estor.
I look forward to your response.
Sincerely,
Victoria L. Henderson
MA Candidate
Department of Geography
Queen’s University
Mackintosh-Corry Hall, D324
Kingston, ON (Canada) K7L 3N6
Tel: +001 613 533 6000, x 75936
Fax: +001 866 876 8348
Email: 2dtvh(at)qlink.queensu.ca