“This is our ancestral land. We have the right to be here,” whispers Hortencia Zhagüi, who represents the Kimsakocha Women’s School of Agroecology, as she edges past a security guard who immediately reaches for his phone to document the intrusion. The guard shouts warnings about trespassing, but the group moves forward undeterred, their footsteps barely audible against the soft, water-laden moss underfoot. " https://ricochet.media/indigenous/brandi-morin-in-ecuador-indigenous-water-defenders-take-on-a-canadian-mining-giant/
@gerrymcgovern As of late, Canadians have had to deal with threats to their sovereignty. I would hope that they might become sensitive to the threats to other people's sovereignty they impose from their mining companies abroad.