Slain Mexican activist’s supporters take case to Supreme Court of Canada
OTTAWA — Family and supporters of a Mexican activist who was killed after opposing a Canadian company’s mining project are asking the Supreme Court of Canada to review a federal ombudsman’s decision not to investigate the matter.
The case stretches back to 2007 when Calgary-based Blackfire Exploration Ltd. opened a barite mine in Chiapas, Mexico, prompting local opposition, demonstrations and a blockade of a route to the project.
After being beaten and threatened with death for leading protests over the mine’s environmental and social effects, activist Mariano Abarca was fatally shot outside his home in November 2009.
Members of Abarca’s family and organizations concerned with mining abuses presented information to the public sector integrity commissioner in 2018, asking him to probe whether there was wrongdoing by members of the Canadian Embassy in Mexico.