
Quick Filters
List
Controls
Focus
Link
Legend
New
Locate Me
Follow these simple steps to save LeelaMaps to your homescreen for quick access. Your current search filters will be saved, making it easy to pick up right where you left off.
Open Safari:
Tap the Share Button:
Add to Home Screen:
Confirm:
Done:
Open Chrome:
Open the Menu:
Add to Home Screen:
Confirm:
Done:
Farm
HomeGrower
Resources
Land
GardenParty
Gardener
Free Stuff
EcoFolk
MicroBiz
Help
Plantathon
UnexpectedFruit🌳
Profile
Land
Resource
Deploy
Plant
SeedBank
Mushroom
Animal
Recycle
FirePrevention
BYTE
RideShare
Garden Task
EcoBusiness
Let's Grow…
Gardener
GrowHere
Grass2Garden
EcoSpace
ForageGuide
Grow🍄
Litter
RewildMe
DeFence
DePave
GardenPlots
GreenBelt
Let's Cob
Litter
Request🌳Belt
RescuePlan
Rewild
Garden
EcoSpace
ForageGuide
Cob
EcoCamp
Farm
FoodForest
GardenPlots
GreenBelt
HomeGrow
NatureScene
Nursery
TechFree
VerticalGrow
Tools
Water
Dirt
Foodwaste
Plantwaste
SeedBank
Seeds
Carcass
Charcoal
Commit
Manure
Mulch
Reporpuse Materials
WoodyMaterials
EcoFriend
EcoTeam
Gardener
GrowLove
HomeGrower
TreeService
CompostService
GardenParty
Let's Grow…
GardenTask
Landcrafting
Plant Seeds
Plant:Transplant
Prevent🔥
ForageGuide
Grow🍄
Prevent Fire
Recycle
♻️ Project
Cleanup
Cob
Compost
ControlBurn
EcoClass
Experiment
GardenParty
HomeMade
LayMulch
LocalGrown
PlantNSeek
Plantathon
Rideshare
SeedDrop
SeedSwap
SurveyLand
FruitTree
Jackpot
Plants
UnexpectedFruit🌳
TreeInLine
Climbable🌳
Flower
FreePlants
GrowInRoad
NeedsCare
Nursery
PlantStatus
Succession🌿
Free
Let's Trade
MicroBiz
Prices
Travel
Rideshare
SmallBusiness
HireMe
Hiring
bnb
buy
HomeGrower
rent
sell
Coop
EcoBusiness
FM Vendor
FarmersMarket
Food
Giftsman
Free
FreeStore
FreeFood
FreeMaterials
FreeMaterials🪵
FreeOrgWaste
FreeSamples
FreeCharcoal
FreeLand
FreeMulch
FreeMushrooms
FreePhone
FreePlants
FreeSeeds
FreeWater
FreeWiFi
Other
DrawdownBiz
Gardener
HomeGrow
Nursery
CompostService
Grow🍄
TreeService
BYTE
EcoCamp
Farm
GardenPlots
Coop
LetsGroupBuy
Makerspace
Library
Refills
TooLibrary
Vehiclibrary
Clothlibrary
Laundry
HomeMade
Kitchen
♻️ Service
Coop
LetsGroupBuy
Library
Refills
TooLibrary
Vehiclibrary
Clothlibrary
Laundry
Compost Service
GardenPlots
HomeGrown
HomeMade
Kitchen
LocalGrown
Makerspace
Repairshop
MicroBiz
WiMP
Laundry
PrintDelivery
AcceptsCrypto
Compost Service
Coop
FruitStand
HomeCafé
HomeGrower
Price
Refills
Tree Service
Passenger
Delivery
Driver
DeliverHere
Cargo4Pickup
CarCampTips
MobilMart
PrintDelivery
RVbnb
I'm Hungry
Travel
HandiCapable
Restroom
Coworking
Power
Recycle
Rest Area
Trash
Water
WiFi
Library
NakedSpace
Refills
Safe Space
TooLibrary
Vehiclibrary
Clothlibrary
Compost
GardenTools
Compost Service
Fire Pit
Food
Gym
Healing Space
Kitchen
Laundry
Makerspace
Meditation
Printer
Repairshop
Sanctuary
Shelter
SmokingArea
TechFree
Tour
Tree Service
TrashBin
RecycleBin
Clothing ♻️
Compost
WasteMap
Litter
Materials
Landfill
LitterPickup
Materials🪵
PickupParty
PlasticBags
Repairshop
♻️ Project
♻️ Service
Event
Photo
Change
Social
Art
Free
Lost
Found
Travel
RepairMe
Info
Review
GoodDeed
History
LookingFor
News
Poem
Prediction
Story
TiYL
ToDo
Wish
Wishlist
General Tip
Travel Tip
Fact
Free
GrowHere
Prices
Found
Lost
UnexpectedFruitTree
Lost&Found
Climbable🌳
FreePlants
News
Utility
LayClaim
GrowHere
Grass2Garden
RewildMe
DeFence
DePave
Drawdown
Let's Cob
Looking For
Request🌳Belt
Rewild
Wishlist
TravelTips
Bucketlist
CampTips
CarCampTips
RVbnb
bnb
EcoHub
Events
Art
Barefoot
CarFree
FirePit
Food
ForageGuide
History
NakedSpace
NatureScene
TechFree
Tour
Utilities
PeaceLuck
Party
CleanupJam
Cuddle
Dance
EcoActivities
Event
FreeXpression
Game
GardenParty
Let's Cob
Music Jam
PlantNSeek
Plantathon
RainDance
Watch
Help Me!
Disaster
Survivor
Animal in Distress
Smoke : Fire
Hostile Presence
MissingPerson
Hazard
Fire Hazard
Predator
Pollution
Road Block
Jackpot
🔥HazardMap
Smoke
Tree In Line
Fire Pit
GrowInRoad
Other
Local Emergencies
SupplyDropoff
1stResponder
HandiCapable
Sanctuary
Shelter
Safe Space
Healing Space
Rest Area
Water
1stAidKit
Narcan
Charcoal
EvacRoute
Reporting
Prevention
🔥Hazard
ContrldBurn
EmergencyInfo
Cob
Gardener
Goats
GreenBelt
RequestCob
RequestGB
Tree Service
Vegetation Task
Water
🔥Ext
🔥Responder
Basic Bio
EcoFriend
Love
Social
Status
Selfie
Survivor
1stResponder
LookingFor
MyRawJourney
Vegan
Crafter
Gardener
Giftsman
HandiPerson
HomeGrower
MissingPerson
PtMY
Rideshare
🔥Responder
By Leela Maps |
Modified on March 6th, 2024 at 4:39 pm March 6, 2024 at 4:36 pm |
Art, graffiti, Israel, Israel-Palestine conflict, nazi, politics
Anti-mining protests that have roiled Panama for the last two weeks turned deadly on Tuesday when a man allegedly shot and killed two demonstrators, according to police.
A chilling video posted by bystanders on X, formerly known as Twitter, showed a disheveled elderly man apparently frustrated with the logjam trying to force the protestors to remove a barrier blocking the Pan American highway about 50 miles south of the capital, before pulling out a pistol and opening fire. Panama’s National Police later said they arrested the suspected gunman at the scene of the shooting.
The unusual scene of violence is the latest flashpoint in some of the largest protests to hit the Central American nation since Panamanians flooded the streets en masse to demonstrate against the dictatorship of Manuel Noriega in the 1980s.
For weeks, tens of thousands of protestors have vented their fury at a controversial mining contract given to Minera Panama, the local subsidiary of a Canadian mining company, to extract copper, a key component in electric car batteries.
The contract allows Canada’s First Quantum Minerals to restart an open-pit copper mine surrounded by rain forest for the next 20 years, with the possibility of extending for another 20 years.
Environmentalists say the mine could contaminate drinking water and devastate tracts of the 32,000 acres the company negotiated use of, in exchange for yearly payments of $375 million.
Panama’s government has promised, however, that the mine will bring thousands of jobs in addition to the badly needed revenue. First Quantum Minerals did not respond to CNN’s request for comment on the protests.
Opposition to the mine has united environmentalists, indigenous groups and teachers’ and construction unions who see allegations of backroom dealings between the government and the mining company as further evidence of widespread official corruption.
The protestors accuse the government of selling off the nation’s natural resources at the same moment many Panamanians have been hit with the costs of rising inflation and are feeling the impacts of climate change.
“Panamanians are suffering from lack of water, suffering from droughts, principally in the central provinces, animals that die, harvests that don’t happen,” environmental activist Martita Cornejo told CNN en Español.
“The government did not guage the opposition from Panamanian society to a mining contract.”
But former US ambassador to Panama John Feeley said while much of the outrage is real, the new contract announcement has also presented an opportunity for some groups to try to force their own concessions and win sweetheart deals from the government.
“This is the horrible thing about Panama: Even when you protest corruption, you are probably facilitating it as well,” he said.
Weeks of road blocks set up by protesters have shut down the country, preventing farmers from bringing crops to market and sequestering Panamanians in their homes. According to Panama’s association of company executives, the standstill inflicts $80 million in daily losses to local businesses. Celebrations to mark Panama’s independence from Colombia in 1903 were also widely cancelled last week.
Panama’s President Laurentino Cortizo has defended the mining deal after its announcement on October 20, saying the agreement would create jobs and revenue for Panama.
The mine had provided a rare economic bright spot for Panama where tourism has been slow to recover from the pandemic and the drought has reduced traffic though the Panama Canal, which is expected to a cause a drop of revenue of $200 million in 2024.
“We made the right decision, not the easiest one,” Cortizo said. “After a difficult and complicated negotiation for more than two years, a contract was agreed in 2023 between the company Minera Panama and the Panamanian State, which guarantees much better terms and conditions for the country.”
But as the protests have dragged on, Panama’s government has offered concessions that have done little to deflate the crisis: Last week, congress passed a moratorium on all future metal mining and Cortizo called for a nationwide referendum in December on the controversial project.
In 2017, Panama’s Supreme Court declared another contract to operate the copper mine as unconstitutional, forcing the mining company and government to renegotiate the deal.
Opponents now say they are hopeful that an announcement by Panama’s Supreme Court this week that it is examining the legality of the contract could once again kill the deal.
Whatever the resolution to the crisis, it may be too late to repair the damage done to Panama’s reputation in the region as a rare bastion of political and economic stability.
By leela | at 7:37 pm |
Australia, Indigenous People, Indigenous Voice, map, politics
Anti-mining protests that have roiled Panama for the last two weeks turned deadly on Tuesday when a man allegedly shot and killed two demonstrators, according to police.
A chilling video posted by bystanders on X, formerly known as Twitter, showed a disheveled elderly man apparently frustrated with the logjam trying to force the protestors to remove a barrier blocking the Pan American highway about 50 miles south of the capital, before pulling out a pistol and opening fire. Panama’s National Police later said they arrested the suspected gunman at the scene of the shooting.
The unusual scene of violence is the latest flashpoint in some of the largest protests to hit the Central American nation since Panamanians flooded the streets en masse to demonstrate against the dictatorship of Manuel Noriega in the 1980s.
For weeks, tens of thousands of protestors have vented their fury at a controversial mining contract given to Minera Panama, the local subsidiary of a Canadian mining company, to extract copper, a key component in electric car batteries.
The contract allows Canada’s First Quantum Minerals to restart an open-pit copper mine surrounded by rain forest for the next 20 years, with the possibility of extending for another 20 years.
Environmentalists say the mine could contaminate drinking water and devastate tracts of the 32,000 acres the company negotiated use of, in exchange for yearly payments of $375 million.
Panama’s government has promised, however, that the mine will bring thousands of jobs in addition to the badly needed revenue. First Quantum Minerals did not respond to CNN’s request for comment on the protests.
Opposition to the mine has united environmentalists, indigenous groups and teachers’ and construction unions who see allegations of backroom dealings between the government and the mining company as further evidence of widespread official corruption.
The protestors accuse the government of selling off the nation’s natural resources at the same moment many Panamanians have been hit with the costs of rising inflation and are feeling the impacts of climate change.
“Panamanians are suffering from lack of water, suffering from droughts, principally in the central provinces, animals that die, harvests that don’t happen,” environmental activist Martita Cornejo told CNN en Español.
“The government did not guage the opposition from Panamanian society to a mining contract.”
But former US ambassador to Panama John Feeley said while much of the outrage is real, the new contract announcement has also presented an opportunity for some groups to try to force their own concessions and win sweetheart deals from the government.
“This is the horrible thing about Panama: Even when you protest corruption, you are probably facilitating it as well,” he said.
Weeks of road blocks set up by protesters have shut down the country, preventing farmers from bringing crops to market and sequestering Panamanians in their homes. According to Panama’s association of company executives, the standstill inflicts $80 million in daily losses to local businesses. Celebrations to mark Panama’s independence from Colombia in 1903 were also widely cancelled last week.
Panama’s President Laurentino Cortizo has defended the mining deal after its announcement on October 20, saying the agreement would create jobs and revenue for Panama.
The mine had provided a rare economic bright spot for Panama where tourism has been slow to recover from the pandemic and the drought has reduced traffic though the Panama Canal, which is expected to a cause a drop of revenue of $200 million in 2024.
“We made the right decision, not the easiest one,” Cortizo said. “After a difficult and complicated negotiation for more than two years, a contract was agreed in 2023 between the company Minera Panama and the Panamanian State, which guarantees much better terms and conditions for the country.”
But as the protests have dragged on, Panama’s government has offered concessions that have done little to deflate the crisis: Last week, congress passed a moratorium on all future metal mining and Cortizo called for a nationwide referendum in December on the controversial project.
In 2017, Panama’s Supreme Court declared another contract to operate the copper mine as unconstitutional, forcing the mining company and government to renegotiate the deal.
Opponents now say they are hopeful that an announcement by Panama’s Supreme Court this week that it is examining the legality of the contract could once again kill the deal.
Whatever the resolution to the crisis, it may be too late to repair the damage done to Panama’s reputation in the region as a rare bastion of political and economic stability.
Customize your search.
Add a new note to the map.
Toggle between local & global results.
Clear search filters.
View list of notes.