Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire

Public Protests Persist in Panama: A Country Without a Colonial Enclave Mentality
AfroResistance
15 Nov 2023
🖨️ Print Article
Protest in Panama against Canadian mining company First Quantum Minerals
Protest in Panama against Canadian mining company First Quantum Minerals (Photo: Arnulfo Franco, AP)

Panamanians are in protest against a contract granted to a Canadian Mining Company. Black communities are particularly impacted by environmental degradation and displacement caused by open-pit mining.

Originally published in AfroResistance.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CITY OF PANAMA, PANAMA - November 1st, 2023

The Panamanian government approved a contract with Minera Panama, a subsidiary of the multinational company First Quantum Minerals, with the same constitutional flaws as the contract approved in 1997. This fact has sparked anger throughout society and mobilized public outrage across Panama. Several sectors, especially those from black communities near the mining region in the province of Colon, have joined this struggle. The Panamanian population is protesting in the streets due to their disagreement with mining extractivism and the undemocratic and repressive manner in which this contract with Minera Panama was approved. This open-pit mine is the largest in Central America and one of the largest in Latin America, located in the District of Donoso in the province of Colon, which has the highest black population in the country.

Public indignation centers around the recent accelerated approval of the contract with Minera Panama, a decision made against the will of the Panamanian people. This approval allows Minera Panama to continue extracting copper, gold, molybdenum, and other minerals for more than 20 years, extendable, in the midst of the Mesoamerican Biological Corridor.

Protesters argue that mining operations have caused significant environmental degradation, displacement of local communities, and a decrease in the quality of life for residents. These social impacts are intrinsically linked to the history of mining in the country, which has disproportionately affected black communities through displacement and marginalization, thus deepening the inequalities experienced in the sixth most unequal country in the world.

In Panama, there are fifteen approved contracts for open-pit metallic mining exploitation, exploration, and beneficiation. Of these fifteen contracts, the copper mine Minera Panama, owned by First Quantum Minerals, is the one currently exploiting mineral resources and generating benefits to this date. By 2022, they reported two billion two hundred fifty-nine million dollars, of which they paid 2% in royalties, that is, fifty-seven million dollars. However, this large-scale operation has now become a focal point of public agitation.

Civil society organizations argue that such decisions have been made without sufficient public consultation, violating the EscazĂş Agreement, which is the Law of the Republic and precisely favors citizen participation. The population has mobilized due to their awareness of the social and environmental impacts of mining, especially in the black communities of the rich biodiversity of the Colon region. The mining experience in the country involves displacement and marginalization, greater impoverishment of communities, abuses towards women due to the presence of outsiders in the communities, and changes in agricultural production due to the mining-imposed border.

Today in the streets, the following are demanded:

  1. Guarantee the right to protest safely and that law enforcement agencies stop abuse and the use of force against protesters.
  2. That Deputies of the country put on the Panama jersey, abandon the servility they carry within, and have a minimum amount of love for the land that saw them born. May they not jeopardize the future of this country.
  3. Demand that the Supreme Court of Justice assume its role and promptly restore social peace to the country by declaring the Law 406 contract unconstitutional, which was irresponsibly approved by the Assembly of Deputies and signed by the President of the Republic in less than 72 hours.
  4. Call for an indefinite retroactive mining moratorium law that stops all pending applications, extensions, or any permits for mining exploitation in Panama.
  5. Respect the international agreements and treaties that the country has signed regarding the environment and the protection of environmental defenders in our country.
  6. Demand that the three branches of the State respect the will of the people, who have made it clear that Panama is worth more without mining and that it is not a people with a colonial enclave mentality.

For more information, please contact: 

Chevy Solis, Director of the Institute of Human Rights, chevy@afroresistance.org 
Marcia Olivo, Program Director, marcia@afroresistance.org

Panama
environmental racism
Extraction

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles? Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


Related Stories

Gary Wilson
Musk’s A.I. Power Plant Exposes Capitalism’s Data-Center Crisis
27 May 2026
A Black community in Tennessee is living with the environmental impact of a data center brought to them by Elon Musk and conniving elected offi
Krys Cerisier
U.S. Escalates Tension with Panama as the Panamanian Government Cracks Down on Domestic Protest
02 April 2025
U.S. influence over Panama has steadily increased over the years due to the active pressure from instruments like SOUTHCOM.
Janvieve Williams Comrie
Panama's Shift Toward Militarization Raises Sovereignty Concerns Amid U.S. Influence
19 March 2025
Panama's deepening military ties with the U.S. challenge the nation's constitutionally mandated demilitarization.
Janvieve Williams Comrie
Panama’s Outrage Over Deportations: A Reckoning with a Reality Long Ignored
12 March 2025
Trump administration interference in Panama has brought about a reckoning on migration and human rights throughout the region.
Abdiel RodrĂ­guez Reyes
Panama: Self-Determination and National Popular Unity in the Face of Imperialist Irredentism
05 February 2025
President Donald Trump's recent antagonisms toward Panama have illustrated the need for the Panamanian people to build power through popular un
Janvieve Williams Comrie , Chevy SolĂ­s Acevedo
Analysis: The Importance of Race, Class, and Territorial Sovereignty in Panama Amid Trump’s Canal Threats
15 January 2025
Before beginning his term in office, president-elect Donald Trump already proclaimed his intention to seize the Panama Canal.
Janvieve Williams Comrie
Panama Escalates Measures in a Pre Existing Migration Crisis
17 July 2024
Panama is tightening its border policy to stop migrants from entering the country by making the conditions of migrating through the Darién Gap
National Strike in Panama Demands Justice for the Poor
Peoples Dispatch
National Strike in Panama Demands Justice for the Poor
27 July 2022
For almost two weeks, tens of thousands of Panamanians have been taking to the streets across the country protesting the cost of living crisis
Credit: AFP
Jemima Pierre, BAR Editor and Contributor
A Dirty Occupation: The UN’s Criminal Enterprise and Ecological Catastrophe in Haiti
17 November 2021
What are the environmental and ecological impacts of large-scale military occupations by the United Nations “peacekeeping” missions?

More Stories


  • Austin Cole
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    Repression of Palestine Solidarity at Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Part 1
    17 May 2024
    Austin Cole joins us to discuss his suspension from MIT for his activity with the Palestine Solidarity Encampment and the attacks by the state. This is the first part of a two-part…
  • IntegrateNYC march in NYC
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    IntegrateNYC Lawsuit Seeks to End Segregation in New York City Schools
    17 May 2024
    Omari Soulfinger and Avery from IntegrateNYC join us from New York City to discuss a first-of-its-kind lawsuit asserting a right to an antiracist education under the New York State Constitution.
  • Sudan refugees leaving Khartum
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    Political and Humanitarian Crisis in Sudan
    17 May 2024
    Abayomi Azikiwe is the editor of the Pan-African News Wire. He joins us from Detroit to discuss Sudan, where a military struggle for power has created a political and humanitarian crisis.
  • Breakthrough News
    Jemima Pierre, BAR Editor and Columnist
    The Real Reason the US is Invading Haiti w/ Dr. Jemima Pierre
    15 May 2024
    Dr. Jemima Pierre, BAR Editor and Columnist, discusses Haiti’s newest puppet leaders and why foreign intervention is not the solution to the deepening crisis in the country.
  • Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist
    Morehouse Men Must Protest Against Biden
    15 May 2024
    The Morehouse College class of 2024 has a historic opportunity to tell Joe Biden and the world that millions of Black people are outraged by the Israeli/U.S. genocide in Gaza. The only thing they…
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us