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media advisory
friends of the earth international
april 25, 2006
newmont: don’t poison our drinking
water
DENVER (US), April 25, 2006 – Friends of the
Earth International and local communities
from Peru, Ghana and Indonesia demand that
US-based mining giant Newmont stop poisoning
the drinking water around its mining
operations.
Representatives from Peru and Ghana will
bring this message to Newmont CEO Wayne Murdy
during the company’s shareholder meeting
today in Denver.
PERU
In Choropampa in Peru 400 people were
hospitalized after mercury, a toxic metal and
mining by-product, was spilled in the
environment near a Newmont gold mine in 2000.
The company did not agree to local demands
for an independent health impact study. At La
Apalina, the company closed an irrigation
channel that is crucial for the survival of
local farmers. “Water is the source of life.
To deprive poorest people of this right so
that a few people can get rich, is one of the
gravest sins that Newmont is committing in
the Northern Andes of Peru,” says Father
Marco Arana of the Peruvian organization
Grufides.
INDONESIA
In Indonesia, the Ministry of Environment
commissioned an investigation about pollution
around a Newmont mine in the Buyat Bay area
in 2004. Drinking water for the local
community contained up to three times the
legally allowed amount of mercury, a toxic
metal and mining by-product, and the amount
of arsenic, which is also toxic, exceeded
legal norms. High concentrations of mercury
and arsenic were detected in the Buyat Bay
seabed. Health problems such as skin
diseases, tumors and birth defects have
become more and more frequent. In August
2004, 23 people were hospitalized and had to
undergo surgery.
GHANA
Newmont’s operations in Ahafo, even at the
construction stages, have impacted negatively
on water availability in the area. “The
construction of a dam on river Subri has
deprived many communities of access to
drinking water and for water-based
livelihoods. The dam has left the river Subri
almost dead and the disposal of fecal matter
into river Asuopre has rendered it unsafe for
use by communities.” says Daniel
Owusu-Koranteng of the Wassa Association of
Communities Affected by Mining (WACAM) in
Ghana. The water situation of the communities
is expected to worsen when Newmont starts its
mining operations.
Newmont refused to address many complaints
by locals in the cases mentioned above but
also in other countries. Demands for
independent research were ignored and
promises made at last year’s shareholder
meeting have been broken. The company merely
responds with Public Relations activities to
explain how environmentally friendly its
operations supposedly are.
Friends of the Earth International, the
Indigenous Support Network and the Fourth
World Centre for Indigenous Law and Politics
(both from the University of Colorado in
Denver) have invited Mr. Daniel
Owusu-Koranteng, from WACAM in Ghana, and
Father Marco Arana, from Grufides in Peru, to
Denver where they presented the impacts
mining on indigenous people in their
countries at the conference "The Real Price
of Gold?" on April 24, 2006.
On April 25, they will attend the Newmont
shareholder meeting and meet Newmont
officials. They will ask Newmont to stop
poisoning drinking water and stress the need
for independent research and monitoring of
Newmont’s performance in guaranteeing water
quality around its operations worldwide.
‘These examples show that local communities
around the world are not properly protected
against companies like Newmont and their
destructive mining activities. Local people
are often negatively affected and most of the
time they don’t want giant mining operations
in the first place. Affected people need to
get better rights to protect their
environment and their health. If needed, they
must be able to take a company like Newmont
to court in the US for crimes committed in
other parts of the world,” says Paul de
Clerck from Friends of the Earth
International
A reduction of mining globally is needed to
ensure a sustainable livelihood for local
communities and a sustainable use of natural
resources. Worst practices should be
immediate halted, especially cyanide heap
leach gold mining and submarine and riverine
tailings disposal.
for more information
Daniel Owusu-Koranteng, Wassa Association of
Communities Affected by Mining (WACAM) Ghana:
phone: +1-720-352-6195 (only April 25 until
April 27) or email:
Father Marco Arana (Spanish), Grufides
(Grupo de Formación e Intervención para el
Desarrollo Sostenible), Peru: phone:
+1-720-352-6195 (only April 25 until April
27) or email:
Torry Kuswardhono, Friends of the Earth
Indonesia/Walhi (Indonesian Forum for the
Environment): phone: +62-811-383270 or
e-mail:
Paul de Clerck, Friends of the Earth
International: phone: + 32-473-510147 or
e-mail:
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