Colombia’s Constitutional Court has issued one of the most significant environmental justice rulings in Latin American history, ordering the government to protect 30 Indigenous communities in the Amazon whose food and water have been contaminated with mercury from illegal gold mining. Tests found mercury levels in the territory reaching up to 17 times above safe limits — and the court ruled that the state’s failure to act amounted to a structural breakdown of its constitutional duties.
At a glance
- Indigenous mercury ruling: Leaders representing 30 communities in the Yuruparí macroterritory brought the case, arguing that poisoned rivers and fish — their primary food source — were destroying both their health and their cultural way of life.
- Scale of contamination: A 2020 study found that 93% of Indigenous individuals tested in comparable affected areas had mercury concentrations above safe limits, driven by illegal artisanal gold mining operations across the region.
- Government accountability: The court assigned specific duties to the Ministries of Environment, Health, and Foreign Affairs, and ordered a temporary suspension of new gold mining licenses in the affected territory while longer-term protections are built.
Why mercury is so dangerous for these communities
Mercury is widely used in artisanal gold mining to bind with gold particles in ore. When burned off, it releases toxic vapor and leaches into rivers and soil — and for communities that depend on fish as a dietary staple, the exposure is nearly impossible to avoid.
The World Health Organization lists mercury as one of the ten chemicals of greatest public health concern globally. Exposure causes severe neurological damage, cognitive disorders, and developmental harm — particularly in children. For the communities of the Yuruparí macroterritory, these are not abstract risks. They are the daily reality.
The court’s ruling directly addresses the health dimension, affirming the communities’ rights to health, food security, and cultural integrity as inseparable from the health of their environment — a legal framing that goes further than most environmental rulings in the region.
A roadmap, not just a declaration
What sets this decision apart is its specificity. The court didn’t simply declare a harm — it ordered a structured response.
The ruling calls for the creation of an intercultural dialogue body to coordinate a remediation plan with the communities themselves at the table. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs is directed to seek international cooperation for cleanup efforts. The Ministry of Health must develop strategies for treating those already affected. And the suspension of new gold mining licenses buys time while longer-term protections are built.
Whether these orders translate into action on the ground will depend heavily on political will and enforcement capacity. Illegal mining across the Colombian Amazon has proven extraordinarily difficult to contain, and that remains a serious and unresolved challenge even after this ruling.
Built on a foundation of legal innovation
Colombia has been building one of the world’s most progressive bodies of environmental law for nearly a decade. In 2016, a landmark ruling granted legal personhood to the Atrato River, recognizing it as a subject of rights rather than a resource to be exploited. This mercury ruling builds directly on that precedent — extending the logic that if the river has rights, then the people whose survival depends on that river have a legal claim when those rights are violated.
The court explicitly stated that the communities’ cultural identity was at risk due to the poisoning of their territory. That framing — connecting environmental harm to cultural erasure — is a significant legal step, and one that resonates far beyond Colombia’s borders.
Colombia became a signatory to the Minamata Convention on Mercury in 2013, a global treaty designed to reduce mercury pollution from industrial and artisanal sources. This ruling strengthens Colombia’s alignment with that commitment and may pressure other signatory nations to move beyond treaty language toward enforceable domestic protections.
An Indigenous-led victory with global implications
The communities of the Yuruparí macroterritory didn’t wait for outside advocates to name the problem. They documented the harm, built the legal case, and won — a model grounded in local knowledge and driven by the people most affected.
Similar patterns are playing out across the world, where Indigenous and forest-dependent communities are asserting legal and cultural rights over the ecosystems they depend on. A landmark study published in Science found that Indigenous-managed territories contain a disproportionate share of the world’s remaining biodiversity — suggesting that legal victories like this one carry ecological stakes far beyond any single community.
That model — asserting rights, demanding accountability, and winning — is becoming a template for environmental justice movements from the Amazon to the Arctic.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Mongabay
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Indigenous land rights recognized for 160 million hectares ahead of COP30
- How Ghana’s fishing communities secured marine protections at Cape Three Points
- The Good News for Humankind archive on Colombia
About this article
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