Infrastructure projects often raise complex debates when they affect indigenous communities, especially regarding issues related to territory, prior consultation, and the protection of collective rights. In Latin America, one of the cases that garnered particular attention was that of the Ngöbe Buglé communities in Panama, affected by the construction of the Chan 75 dam.
Loreto Ferrer was part of the team of experts that participated in a verification mission organized by the Foundation of the General Council of Spanish Lawyers (FCGAE). The fieldwork carried out made it possible to document the situation of the communities and prepare a legal and technical report on the project’s impacts, with special attention to its potential progression before inter-American human rights bodies.
The assessment mission in Panama
The mission occurred from January 25 to 30, 2011, bringing together lawyers with expertise in human rights. Its aim was to assess firsthand the conditions faced by communities impacted by the dam’s construction and to contrast institutional reports with the population’s direct accounts. To accomplish this, the team met with authorities, representatives of the company responsible for the project, international organizations, and the Ombudsman’s Office, before heading to Changuinola, in the province of Bocas del Toro, to inspect the affected zones.
During the visit, the team explored communities like Charco de la Pava and Valle del Rey, along with resettlement zones and areas already transformed by the construction work. Direct engagement with families and community leaders remained a key element of the effort, offering immediate insight into the tension, vulnerability, and displacement many people had faced since the project began.
The main themes of the report on Chan 75
The examination was framed around five core domains: the entitlement to consultation along with free, prior, and informed consent; the evaluation of risks and the project’s social repercussions; territorial restitution or corresponding compensation; avenues for reparation; and the involvement of communities in decisions and in the advantages generated by hydroelectric initiatives. These foundations made it possible to analyze the case in a holistic manner, weaving together both national and international legal standards with the conditions documented in the field.
According to Loreto Ferrer, the report was designed to lay out a well-documented legal foundation intended to assist both the impacted communities and the institutions involved. Its purpose went beyond raising theoretical objections to the project; it sought to determine whether the actions of state authorities and corporations had upheld the essential rights of indigenous peoples, including collective land ownership, participation, cultural and personal integrity, and the requirement of prior consultation.
Key Findings on the Rights of the Ngöbe Buglé Communities
The report underscores among its key findings an early shortfall in acknowledging rights, especially concerning the communities’ legal standing and their collective land ownership, a lapse that enabled the project to advance without proper consultation or thorough assessments of its social and cultural effects.
Accounts were also gathered describing intimidation, disproportionate force, arbitrary arrests, and negotiation processes that failed to ensure the affected families could make a genuinely free choice, while additional issues emerged in the resettlement zones, where shortcomings were observed in land size and quality, farming potential, and the adequacy of the housing for Ngöbe cultural needs.
Another highly delicate matter involved the ethical and cultural consequences of displacement, as the case records indicated deterioration of the community’s social fabric, the disappearance of territorial reference points, and a call for public acknowledgment of the inflicted harm that extended beyond material compensation.
The possible route via global institutions
One of the key aspects of the work was that the report could serve as input for a potential case brought before the Inter-American human rights system. In that sense, the collection of testimonies and the review of documents were key to building a case with international standing. “It was important to generate useful evidence in case the Inter-American Court decided to open the case. That is why we collected testimonies, identified patterns of conduct, reviewed the relocation contracts, and analyzed recent legislative reforms,” explains Loreto Ferrer.
This kind of process demands meticulous record‑keeping, thorough technical evaluation, and the capacity to interpret both local conditions and the relevant international norms; as a result, the fieldwork and the drafting of the report are not treated as isolated tasks but as components of an evidence‑driven, legally grounded approach to international cooperation that takes into account complex social dynamics.
A Specific Case Within a Broader Context
Loreto Ferrer participation in this mission reflects a type of professional work linked to international cooperation, technical documentation, and the analysis of complex cases in Latin America. It is not merely a matter of providing legal support for these processes, but also of helping ensure that the communities’ experiences can be translated into useful inputs for institutional advocacy and the defense of rights.
Viewed collectively, the Ngöbe Buglé case and the analysis of Chan 75 show that technical teams can substantially influence how disputes involving land, indigenous peoples, development projects, and international institutions are evaluated.

