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2008-2013 Constitutional Challenges against Guatemalan Mining Laws [Cerro Blanco]

On 19 June 2008, the Constitutional Court of Guatemala declared seven provisions of the 1997 Mining Law unconstitutional based on a failure to comply with Guatemala’s environmental laws. In particular, the court agreed with the Centre for Environmental and Socio-Legal Action (CALAS) that the following aspects of the Mining Law breached the state’s obligation to protect the environment: (1) the implied approval of administrative inaction for longer than 30 days in response to Environmental Impact Assessments; (2) its permissiveness regarding the release of contaminated waters from mining activities; and (3) the Mining Law’s requirement that companies mitigate waste and noise only to the “extent possible” (Abate and Aldana, 2015). This constitutional challenge arose from social conflict, environmental concerns, and lack of government engagement with community representatives in the approval and granting of licences for the Marlin Mine project (Human Rights House Foundation, 2012). However, the Court’s findings applied broadly to all operations impacted by the impugned provisions of the 1997 Mining Law, including the Cerro Blanco project.

Indeed, following this decision, the government instituted a moratorium on all new mining licences until amendments could be made to the Mining Law. The moratorium was lifted in 2012 following the introduction of legislative amendments by the Guatemalan government (see Legal Action, titled “1997-2015 Guatemalan Mining Laws [Cerro Blanco]“, for more detail). In March 2012, Guatemala’s Western Peoples’ Council of Mayan Organizations (CPO)  filed a constitutional challenge of these amendments, arguing that the new law violated their rights as indigenous peoples to be consulted with respect to mining activities impacting their territories. The Constitutional Court released a decision upholding the mining law in 2013. Some groups consider this decision to be a reversal of a 2011 Constitutional Court decision declaring the consultation rights of indigenous peoples to be protected by the Guatemalan constitution (see “2011-2018 Constitutional Challenge of Draft Regulation on Indigenous Consultation Processes [Cerro Blanco]” for more detail). In response to the 2013 decision, the CPO filed a complaint with the Inter-American Commission for Human Rights (see “Complaint over Mining Law at IACHR [Cerro Blanco]” for more detail).

While the CPO represents Mayan Indigenous communities, their legal actions at both the national and international level relate to indigenous rights more broadly, including those of the Xinka Indigenous community in Guatemala. With respect to the Cerro Blanco project site, the current owner, Bluestone Resources Inc., claims that there are no indigenous communities in Asunción Mita. However, according to an interview conducted as part of the Legal Cultures of the Subsoil project with the Asunción Mita Neighbours Association for the Defence of Life, Water, and Nature (Avedevida), there are members of the Xinka indigenous community living in Asunción Mita, though they are not believed to be a large portion of the population.

Type of Action / Tipo de Acción:
Constitutional Proceedings
Legal Description / Descripción Legal:
Corte de Constitucionalidad [Constitutional Court], 1 April 2008, Expediente 1491-2007; Corte de Constitucionalidad [Constitutional Court], 28 February 2013, Expediente 1008-2012
Extractive Project / Proyecto extractivo:
Region / Región:
Central America
Country / País:
Guatemala
Natural Resource / Recurso natural:
Gold, Silver
Jurisdiction / Jurisdicción:
Guatemalan System
Category of Key Actors in Legal Action / Categoría de actores claves en la Acción Legal:
Indigenous Organizations, Non-Profit Organizations, State Institutions
Human Rights Violated/Claimed:
Right to a healthy environment, Right to consultation, Right to due process
Key Legal Actors Involved / Actores jurídicos clave involucrados:
Centre for Environmental and Socio-Legal Action (CALAS), Western Peoples' Council of Mayan Organizations (CPO)
References / Referencias:

CIEL, “Guatemala’s Highest Court Denies Justice to Indigenous Peoples Affected by Mining”, dated 15 March 2013, online: https://www.ciel.org/news/guatemalas-highest-court-denies-justice-to-indigenous-peoples-affected-by-mining-2/, accessed on 8 October 2020.

Human Rights House Foundation, “Guatemala: mining law and the rights of indegenous people”, dated 10 August 2012, online: https://humanrightshouse.org/letters-of-concern/guatemala-mining-law-and-the-rights-of-indegenous-people/, accessed on 8 October 2020.

The Legal Cultures of the Subsoil: The Judicialisation of Environmental Politics in Central America, Interview by Dr. Ainhoa Montoya with the Asunción Mita Neighbours Association for the Defence of Life, Water, and Nature (Avedevida), held in Guatemala City, on 26 February 2017.

NISGUA, “Guatemalan Indigenous Organizations File Complaint over Mining Law with Inter-American Commission on Human Rights”, dated 3 September 2013, online: https://nisgua.org/guatemalan-indigenous-organizations-file-complaint-over-mining-law-with-inter-american-commission-on-human-rights/, accessed on 8 October 2020.

Randall S. Abate and Raquel Aldana, “Banning Metal Mining in Guatemala”, 40 Vermont Law Review 597 (2015), online: http://commons.law.famu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1202&context=faculty-research, accessed on 8 October 2020.