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Anti Gold Mining Conflicts Spreading

david modersbach | 25.04.2007 01:56 | Climate Chaos | Ecology | World

Once isolated communities around the world are suddenly uniting and strengthening in their actions to halt transnational Big Mining projects. On May 2, 2007 community and environmental groups around the world will unite is struggle on the Global Day Of Action Against Barrick Gold Corporation.

Yanacocha in Perù the world´s largest gold mine
Yanacocha in Perù the world´s largest gold mine



Anti-Gold Mining Conflicts Spreading Throughout the Americas

Global Day of Action Against Barrick Gold, May 2, 2007

Big Mining Investors Fear Big Losses


In almost every Latin American country, transnational metals mining firms are exploring, building and operating huge, open-pit gold mines which extract and contaminate using tremendous amounts of water. These new “modern mining” projects leave thousand-year legacies of acid mine drainage, destruction of ecosystems, disease, and regional climate change. Riches in the form of gold, silver and copper are exported to first world shareholders, leaving behind poverty, dependency and pollution.

However, once-isolated communities are suddenly uniting and strengthening in their actions to halt Big Mining projects.

Today there are more than a hundred mining-related local conflicts, in every Latin American country (www.minesandcommunities.org) Campesinos, indigenous and community groups in villages and cities are fighting Big Mining insertion. In countries such as Peru, Ecuador and Colombia, multinational mining firms are responding by arming paramilitary groups to meet community resistance with murder, threats and violence. In every instance, mining firms attempt to "purchase" social license with bribes, handouts, media campaigns and corrupt local politicians, to sell "sustainable gold mining."

The tremendous over consumption of water resources is the key issue in modern metals mining projects. Big mines change regional climate patterns, dry up ecosystems, cause the desertification of agricultural lands, communities are dried out. Big mining projects are being located primarily in sensitive river headwaters of vulnerable arid regions upon which millions of human and ecological communities depend. Big mining, through its intensive use of energy and destruction of habitat, glaciers, aquifers, climate patterns and water resources, is a huge factor in global climate change. Appropriate international and national regulation of Big Mining projects is almost non-existent.

On May 2, 2007, communities around the world affected by Big Mining projects are going to carry out simultaneous demonstrations against the Barrick Gold Corporation. Simultaneous actions will be held in Chile, Argentina, Peru, Australia, Canada, the Philippines, Tanzania, and Europe.

Barrick Gold Corporation, the world's largest gold mining firm, is spearheading the transnational metals mining firms invasion of Latin America. In the past few years, community groups struggling against projects of Barrick Gold Corporation on five continents began communicating together, and this year they have joined together for the first time to call for this Global Day of Action Against Barrick Gold Corporation.

• In Argentina, community activists forced Barrick Gold to suspend operations in the province of La Rioja, the governor ousted due to his corrupt relations with the mining firm, and a state referendum to prohibit open-pit mining is to be voted by the population.

• Chilean and Argentine communities are fighting tooth and nail against the construction of one of the world's largest gold mines in the heart of a UNESCO World Heritage Wilderness Area, in the delicate glacier peaks of the Andes along the Chile-Argentina Border. This is Barrick’s infamous Pascua-Lama/Veladero project.  http://projectcensored.org/censored_2007/index.htm#21

• In Ancash, Peru, fierce community resistance has been answered with the murders of protestors by paramilitary and state forces working for the Barrick Gold Corporation.

• In Australia, a series of powerful direct actions carried out by local Aboriginal leaders, indigenous and community activists has tied up and cast grave doubts on Barrick Gold's huge Lake Cowal project.


On May 2, A Global Day of Action Against Barrick Gold will be carried out. We invite all neighbors, activists and ecologists to join or form the many local-scale actions to be carried out simultaneously and autonomously throughout the world, on the five continents in which Barrick Gold operates.

We hope that through visible and spirited actions, we can join together to draw attention to the grave threat brought upon our world by these transnational large-scale open-pit metals mining projects using cyanide. Our world does not need more gold and silver! We must fight to preserve this world for our children and their children.

We hope to send a message to Barrick Shareholders that their investments are highly risky: Throughout the world, communities are rejecting and shall put an end to these shameful metals mining operations.

written by David Modersbach
National University of Rosario, Argentina
 dmoders@yahoo.com

For More Information:

Mines and Communities www.minesandcommunities.org
CorpWatch www.corpwatch.org
Latin American Observatory of Mining Conflicts www.conflictosmineros.net
www.noalamina.org (Argentina)
www.noalapascualama.org (chile)




david modersbach

Comments

Hide the following comment

What do you have a picture of Yanaocha here?

25.04.2007 17:17

Yanacocha is indeed the world's largest gold mine, and is the root of serious environmental and social problems, but it does not belong to Barrick Gold.

Jamie Kneen
mail e-mail: jamie@miningwatch.ca
- Homepage: http://www.miningwatch.ca


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