It is shareholder’s season once again, and for mining-impacted communities all over the world that means it is time to confront their corporate nemeses at these companies’ annual general meetings. To take advantage of this special time, we are throwing a conference and series of events to highlight the struggles of these communities and create space for them to network with people in Toronto and impacted communities in Canada.

May 5, 8pm: “The Devil Operation” + short films: Screenings in Bickford Park with filmmaker and Representatives from Cerro San Pedro, Mexico (Grace and Harbord)
May 6, 3pm: Protest and Performance w/impacted communities. New Gold’s Annual General meeting, 77 Adelaide St West.
May 6, 6:30pm-8:30pm:
Opening Reception for “Someone Else’s Treasure” Photo opening. Toronto-based Photographer Allan Lissner has documented mining-impacted communities in Tanzania, Guatemala and the Philippines. Leonardo Galleries 133 Avenue Road
May 7, 8pm: G8/20 Special Issue Dominion release party + conference opening party. The Ram in the Rye (55 Gould Street)
May 8-9, 10am-6:30pm: mining (in)justice conference, Earth Sciences Building (UofT) (Bancroft and Huron. map). Click here for a list of speakers!
May 19, 10:30am: Confront Goldcorp at their AGM, 1 King Street West


HAMILTON EVENT:
Canadian Mining Companies Operating With Impunity. Discussion with community representatives from El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala.  Skydragon Cafe, 27 King Street Hamilton Ontario, 7:00 PM. http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=119107694780400&ref=ts

MARKHAM EVENT: Can Mining Be Green? Discussion with indigenous people from Papua New Guinea, Trent and York University and the Green Party. 7:00 PM Milliken Mills Library, 7600 Kennedy Rd. Markham Ontario. http://www.facebook.com/#!/event.php?eid=118225634873301&ref=ts

For more information, go to: solidarityresponse.net

Endorsed by: INDIGENOUS ENVIRONMENTAL NETWORK • SCIENCE FOR PEACE • RAINFOREST ACTION NETWORK • RAINFOREST ACTION NETWORK TORONTO • FIRST NATIONS SOLIDARITY WORKING GROUP • CIRCLE OF SUPPORT/INDIGENOUS SOVEREIGNTY WEEK • RIGHTS ACTION • MINING WATCH • COUNCIL OF CANADIANS • UTERN • OPIRG – YORK • FRIENDS OF THE CONGO, UofT • OPIRG – UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO • CONTINUING EDUCATION STUDENTS’ ASSOCIATION OF RYERSON • YORK UNIVERSITY GRADUATE STUDENTS UNION • UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO STUDENTS’ UNION • ASSOCIATION OF PART-TIME UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO • ACT FOR THE EARTH • LATIN AMERICAN SOLIDARITY NETWORK • THE DOMINION • EXTRACTIVE INDUSTRIES RESEARCH GROUP • NO ONE IS ILLEGAL TORONTO • OIL SANDS TRUTH • SIERRA CLUB PRAIRIE CHAPTER • RYERSON FREE PRESS • YORK FEDERATION OF STUDENTS

WED Film-screenings

In lead up to the mining (in)justice conference and the New Gold shareholder’s meeting, please join us for a feature film and a mix of short movies in the park! We will be joined by Stephanie Boyd, the filmmaker of “The Devil Operation”, which recently debuted at HotDocs. Mining resistance leader Enrique Rivera of FAO Mexico will also join us and show a short film about New Gold in Cerro San Pedro, Mexico.

Bring Blankets! Some snacks and some blanks will also be provided.

“The Devil Operation” Synopsis

Father Marco, a humble priest from the mountains of Peru, is being followed. A private security firm is filming and photographing the priest’s every move; their meticulous reports are code-named “The Devil Operation.” Marco’s allies are murdered and tortured, but he and his disciples refuse to be victims. They turn their cameras on the spies and develop a counter-espionage plan that leads to South America’s largest gold mine.

For the past two decades, Father Marco has defended farming communities against the Yanacocha mine’s abuses, earning him the nickname ‘The Devil’.

The Yanacocha mine is owned by Newmont of Colorado, but mining giants defy borders in their lust for capital: the company’s Canadian subsidiary, Newmont Mining Corporation of
Canada, is listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange.

Ontario film-maker Stephanie Boyd has spent 10 years documenting the farmers’ struggle and became caught up in this real-life political thriller.

PROTEST NEW GOLD’S AGM
In 1996 the Canadian mining company Metallica Resources, now New Gold Inc., came to Cerro de San Pedro, Mexico to exploit gold through open pit mining and cyanide leaching. Since the beginning the company has faced resistance from the town of Cerro de San Pedro, the city of San Luis Potosi, and internationally, organized through the FAO (Frente Amplio Opositor – Broad Opposition Front). The struggle has used legal strategies, through which the FAO won the closure of the mine by the federal environmental authority in November 2009. But, in violation of Mexican law, the mine is still operating with the complicity of the Canadian government and financed by the Toronto Stock Exchange. In response, the FAO is bringing the struggle to the streets to Toronto to directly confront New Gold and give their shareholders a glimpse of the scope of the global resistance to the mine at Cerro de San Pedro, and other similarly destructive mining projects throughout Mexico and the world.
RSVP: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=118647984829529

PHOTO OPENING RECEPTION:
Broken promises, environmental disasters, human rights abuses, and cultural genocide, these are only some of the experiences that indigenous peoples all over the world have had to face when coming into contact with the global mining industry, and it’s perpetual pursuit of profit.
Four years in the making, Someone Else’s Treasure is a multimedia project examining the social and environmental impacts of different multinational projects from the perspectives of various affected communities.

Thus far, Someone Else’s Treasure includes the stories of affected communities in Australia, Canada, Chile, Guatemala, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines, and Tanzania. These intimate portraits are both a critique of the myth of progress and a celebration of the spirit of resistance. In an effort to better understand the true cost of an industry that shapes the world around all of us, the focus is on the externalized – the men, women, and children, that have been left out of the equations and are therefore forced to pay the price for someone else’s treasure.

CONFERENCE LAUNCH PARTY! MAY 7, Ram and the Rye

[Part of the Mining (in)Justice Conference, check it out: http://www.facebook.com/#!/event.php?eid=112912948735691&ref=ts]

The mainstream media portrays the G8/G20 summits as rigid dichotomies of mask-clad protesters clashing with faceless riot police in a cloud of tear gas, all while world leaders try to right the global economic ship.

We think that there is more to be told! Come and support the launch of the Dominion’s special issues on the G8/G20!!

The event is also the opening night of the Mining (in)Justice Conference.

There will be bands and fun times! So Far confirmed: illogik and stacey b. DJ Joe Blow

http://www.dominionpaper.ca/g20

CONFERENCE:

Mining (in)justice: at home and abroad is a conference on the Canadian mining industry (including Tar Sands) set to take place in Toronto on the weekend of May 7-9, 2010. It will feature leaders in movements against Canadian mining companies both within and outside of Canada and provide space for growing our own movements in alliance with communities impacted by this industry.

This is a follow-up conference to last year’s mining conference, which brought over 20 front line defenders to share their stories and strategize solutions to ending corporate impunity and strengthening the struggles against destructive mining projects around the world.

This year, we are expanding the conference into a 3 day event, providing more space for participants to meet each other, form alliances, and plan actions to foster a movement in solidarity with impacted communities.

Reports will be heard from delegates from Honduras, Guatemala, Carrier Sekani First Nation, Papua New Guinea, El Salvador, Ardoch Algonquin, Northern Ontario, Fort Chipewyan, Mexico and more! Clayton Thomas Muller of the Indigenous Environmental Network is MCing the event!


CONFRONT GOLDCORP

Gold Corp is a Canadian mining company infamous for their human rights violation, harms to the environment and to human health. Support the struggles of indigenous peoples throughout the Americas to defend their land, livelihood and right to self-determination.
Human rights are not for sale!
RVSP: http://www.facebook.com/#!/event.php?eid=106254712751818&ref=ts