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media advisory
friends of the earth international
14 august 2004, jakarta, indonesia
police shut us-owned polluting gold mine
in indonesia
groups condemn 'reckless' global mining
pollution guidelines
Friends of the Earth International welcomed
the August 13 decision by Indonesian police
to suspend operations at a US-owned mine
which dumps mine waste into the ocean, while
condemning support for the destructive
practice of ocean dumping of mine waste
recently expressed by the global lending arm
of the World Bank.
Indonesian police decided on August 13 to
suspend operations at the Newmont Minahasa
Raya gold mine after tests at the police
forensic laboratory confirmed scientific
studies showing heavy metal pollution
attributable to ocean dumping of mine waste
into Buyat Bay, North Sulawesi.
Indonesia has been gripped by news of an
epidemic of health problems ranging from skin
ailments, lumps and nervous system complaints
suffered by dozens of Buyat Bay
residents.
Since 1996, Newmont has been dumping 2,000
tons of mercury and arsenic-laced mine waste
(tailings) into the bay daily through the use
of Submarine Tailings Disposal (STD).
“The Buyat Bay pollution disaster shows
that instead of benefiting poor communities,
mining operations destroy livelihoods and
health. So, we do not need the World Bank
Group to speak on behalf of developing
countries to justify supporting the
multinational mining industry,” said Longgena
Ginting, Director of WALHI-Friends of the
Earth Indonesia.
Gold mine waste disposal is also in the
news in Papua New Guinea (PNG), where it
reportedly caused in the past days fish kills
at Canadian mining company Placer Dome's
Misima gold mine.
Earlier this week, Misima Islanders were
shocked to witness the sea filled with dead
fish where the STD mine waste pipe enters the
ocean. Mr. Frazer Bourchier, Misima mine
manager, confirmed that cyanide was being
discharged down the tailings pipe. PNG's The
National newspaper reported that “the fish
killed showed hemorrhaging in the liver,
diaphragms broken, eyeballs bulging from
socket, and their insides inverted into the
mouth”.
Against this disastrous backdrop, the
International Finance Corporation (IFC) --
the main lending arm of the World Bank--
recently ignored recommendations in a report
on mining and oil investments commissioned by
its parent organisation, the World Bank
Group.
The rigorous Extractive Industries Review
[1] is critical of riverine and ocean
disposal of mine waste, however this and
other recommendations are ignored in the new
IFC draft mining guidelines. The IFC draft
states that “deep marine tailings disposal
may be considered as a preferred alternative”
in certain circumstances, and also refuses to
rule out riverine or shallow marine tailings
disposal.
The IFC position even ignores the
repudiation of destructive dumping practices
by mining giants such as BHP Billiton. BHP
Billiton walked away from the Ok Tedi mine in
PNG after destroying a river system,
fisheries and landowners' gardens through
riverine disposal of 80,000 tons/day of mine
waste.
“BHP Billiton was considering using
Submarine Tailings Disposal of mine waste at
their Gag Island Nickel project in Indonesia.
However, Chairman Don Argus recently wrote
and declared BHP-B would not use STD in any
of their projects”, said Igor O'Neill of the
Mineral Policy Institute. “Ok Tedi proved
that you can't trade the environment to
alleviate poverty. The IFC is out of step
with mining industry majors who now reject
mine waste dumping,” he concluded.
IFC guidelines are important not just
because they guide the IFC's lending
operations, but because they are treated as a
de facto standard by other public and private
financiers and export credit agencies. The
new draft guideline is the first step in a
major overhaul of all of IFC's standards.
“This is not a promising start”, said
Janneke Bruil of Friends of the Earth
International. “The IFC seems out of touch
with reality. Reckless dumping of toxic waste
in our rivers and seas is irresponsible,
outdated, unacceptable and worlds away from
its mission to alleviate poverty through
sustainable development.”
For more information
contact:
In Indonesia: Longgena Ginting,
WALHI-Friends of the Earth Indonesia: +62 811
927 038 and Igor O'Neill, +62 81 286 12
286
In Australia: Techa Beaumont, Mineral
Policy Institute : +61 409 318 406
In Europe: Janneke Bruil, Friends of the
Earth International: +31 6 52 118 998
note to the editors
:
[1] The World Bank Extractive Industries
Review was a three-year multi-stakeholder
process chaired by eminent person Dr. Emil
Salim, which included mining industry
participation and numerous regional meetings
around the world.
More information on the International
Finance Corporation's draft mining guideline:
http://www.ifc.org/ifcext/enviro.nsf/Content/DraftMining
More information on Buyat Bay STD pollution:
http://www.walhi.or.id/eng/heavymet_buyat
More information on Submarine Tailings
Disposal:
www.mpi.org.au/std/
More information on the Extractive
Industries Review:
www.eireview.info
and
www.foei.org/ifi
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