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Gold giant faces Honduras inquiry into alleged heavy metal pollution
Villagers and NGOs have accused Goldcorp of poisoning people and livestock by contaminating the Siria valleyAuthorities in Honduras are investigating claims that one of the world's biggest gold mining corporations has contaminated a valley with toxic heavy metals. Villagers and non-governmental organisations have accused Goldcorp of killing livestock and making people sick by polluting land and rivers in the Siria valley.The environmental prosecutor is undertaking an investigation after being presented with evidence that the Canadian corporation's San Martin opencast mine discharged highly acidic and metal-rich water in 2008. The company has denied wrongdoing.The inquiry comes at a critical time when record gold prices are encouraging other mining corporations to explore fresh sites in Honduras. Environmentalists fear the impoverished central American country will lift a moratorium on new mining after a new government takes office in January.Goldcorp is shutting the decade-old San Martin mine after extracting nearly 12,000 tonnes of ore from its forested slopes. The dynamite explosions have stopped and there are no more ore-laden trucks rattling down rutted, dusty roads.People in villages bordering the site say the damage is done and the fields and streams are poisoned. "The water tastes like acid, like something out of a car battery," said Roger Abraham, vice-president of the Siria Valley Environmental Committee, an activist group. "It would have been better if the mine never came. It has done more harm than good."He said the damage to the valley would galvanise campaigns against other mines. "We will use peaceful, social actions to block access. We can't allow this to be repeated."The community's complaints have been backed by two studies, commissioned by the UK-based advocacy group Cafod. The studies detected high acidity which could be linked to cyanide "heap-leaching" methods to extract gold from low-grade deposits. They describe how the process soaks piles of crushed gold ore in a cyanide solution which filters down, leaching out the precious metal from the rock but also releasing other toxic heavy metals such as arsenic, mercury and lead. Without careful management it can contaminate streams and groundwater.The first study, by Paul Younger, a Newcastle university hydro-geochemical engineering professor and expert on mine water management, detected acidic mine drainage, whereby sulphides in the rock are exposed to oxygen and water and produce sulphuric acid. Younger said this can have devastating effects on animals and plants.A follow-up study by Adam Jarvis and Jaime Amezaga, also of Newcastle University, found evidence of "severe" contamination in the form of highly acidic and metal-rich water from the mine site flowing into a stream used by villagers for agriculture and domestic purposes. The data was in a previously undisclosed 2008 report by Defomin, Honduras's mining regulatory authority."This new information provides concrete evidence that the San Martin mine has caused pollution in Honduras," said Sonya Maldar of Cafod. "Goldcorp must clean up its act so that the people of Siria Valley are not left with a toxic legacy."The enviromental prosecutor is reviewing the information and is expected to decide soon whether to prosecute. Goldcorp did not respond to interview requests for this article. But in previous public statements, the company denied wrongdoing and said its mining operation and clean-up met the highest international environmental standards and had been vetted by authorities. The company said Defomin reported in September 2008 that water flowing from Palo Alto pit had been treated to international standards."The presence of the mine has had no impact on the quantity or quality of the water in the areas of the San Martin mine," Goldcorp said in May last year. In a televised debate in November two senior managers said there was no problem with the discharge of acidic waters. Honduran authorities, the company said, took water samples during three visits in 2008 and all pH measurements were normal. They also reviewed and approved the mine closure plan.A skeleton crew is now cleaning up the area. "As the site becomes rehabilitated, Goldcorp will cede the land to the San Martin Foundation for commercial agricultural projects," said the company's website.The mine is visible from miles away: an orange-coloured gash from which vegetation and clay have been stripped from the hillside, an incongruous sight in a landscape of meadows and sun-crinkled villagers on horse-back.A Nevada-based company, Glamis Gold, started mining in 2000 after relocating the village of Palo Ralo. Entre Mares, a Honduran subsidiary owned by Goldcorp, took over the concession in 2005.Initally the project had local support. As a rural backwater in the western hemisphere's third poorest country the prospect of good jobs and new houses was welcome, said Rudolfo Arteaga, a Palo Ralo farmer and community activist. Brick homes were an improvement on adobe and 400 people got temporary work – but the price was too high, he said.Of 18 riverbeds, 15 were now parched, the alleged result of the mine using up to 220 gallons a minute during operations, according to Cafod. Crops had withered and, while drought currently afflicts much of central America, Siria's troubles, said Arteaga, arrived with the mine.Water was not only scarce, it was contaminated, he said. Cattle had died – this year 24 carcasses were found on grazing land near the mine – and people suffered respiratory, skin and gastro-intestinal diseases.Woods had been felled, leaving the area vulnerable to mudslides during tropical storms. Goldcorp had planted thousands of trees but often used alien species such as eucalyptus, Arteaga said, which sucked up more water.Concern about environmental damage in Honduras prompted a moratorium on new mining in 2004 but the ban may not survive a political crisis which has left Honduras broke, starved of investment and short of economic options.Campaigners fear Honduras's new government, which is due to be sworn in on 27 January, will bow to pressure from the national assembly and mining corporations to permit new explorations."In this climate it's difficult to be optimistic," said Pedro Landa, executive director of campaign group Caritas in Tegucigalpa. "There is a lot of pressure for mining to resume."MiningPollutionHondurasGoldRory Carrollguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds guardian.co.uk |
Snowy stories
Those winter tales that didn't make the front page news.bbc.co.uk |
Sudan hangs six over refugee riot
Sudanese authorities execute six men for their part in a deadly 2005 riot at a refugee camp in Khartoum. news.bbc.co.uk |
Obama firm on healthcare reform
US President Barack Obama will stick to his agenda despite a shock defeat in Senate elections in Massachusetts, an aide says. news.bbc.co.uk |
Memories of the Holocaust: Zigi Shipper
'We saw the chimneys. Rumours said it was a crematorium. I didn't know what that meant'One morning after war broke out in September 1939, Zigi Shipper woke up to find his father standing by his bed. "He told me the Germans were coming and he had to go away." How could he leave you, I ask? "Like a lot of people in Łódz [the Polish city where Zigi was born], he thought the Nazis would only be after men of fighting age, not children and women. Nobody thought they would want to kill all Jews. How wrong we were. But still, my father ran away to Russia, thinking that was the right thing to do."Zigi (short for Zygmunt) was nine. "That was the last time I saw my dad," he tells me in his living room in Bushey, Hertfordshire. His father returned to Poland later in the war but could only get as far as the Warsaw ghetto. What happened to him? "I presume he died. I have been to all the museums and I can't find a trace of him. He might have died in the Warsaw ghetto or Treblinka [the death camp]. Finding ways to die was not difficult for a Jew."Zigi was raised by his grandparents in the ghetto in Łódz that the Nazis established in November 1939. His mother, divorced from his father before the war, had moved to Belgium. "I presumed she was dead." He was wrong.Food was so scarce in the ghetto that Zigi's grandfather became weak and died. Death was everywhere: "When I was 10 I stepped over dead bodies in the ghetto without much feeling." Ghetto life took on a routine for him and his grandmother. He worked in a metal factory producing munitions. But the routine was broken when, in 1941, the Nazis began to round up Jews for what they called "resettlement". On one of these raids, Zigi was slung into a lorry. "I managed to jump off – I ran and ran and luckily, no German saw me."Zigi stops telling his story for a moment. "I feel [like] the luckiest person alive. I survived concentration camps, I jumped out of a lorry without being seen."He was hospitalised for a mild heart attack aged 51. "While I was there I had a massive coronary. Let me tell you, the best place to have a coronary is in hospital. All my life I asked myself, why did I survive? My answer is: 95% of it was luck." Zigi celebrated his 80th birthday earlier this month. "If you had told me when I was a boy I would be alive at 60, let alone 80, I would have laughed at you."In July 1944, the Nazis decided to liquidate the Łódz ghetto. Zigi and his grandmother found themselves on a cattle truck heading to a death camp. The first thing Zigi noticed when he got off the train at Auschwitz was that the sky was hazy. Then he noticed the terrible smell. "From a distance we saw chimneys with smoke coming out. Rumours started spreading that it was a crematorium. I still didn't know what that meant."He was lined up for selection. To the left went the fit men, who showered, changed into a uniform and went to their barracks. Within an hour those who went to the right were gassed to death – women, children, disabled and elderly people. Again, Zigi was lucky: he was 15, fit enough to work. All but inexplicably, Shipper's grandmother survived the Auschwitz selections too.Zigi soon left Auschwitz to work in a series of labour camps. But that didn't mean the horrors of the Holocaust were over for him. One day, while he was working in a railway yard, five men were caught stealing cigarettes. They were hanged in front of the whole camp. "Each one jumped off the stools they were put on so as not to give the Germans the satisfaction of knowing they killed them."Zigi was liberated from his German captors by the British army on 3 May 1945. He ended up recuperating in a children's home in Germany. While there he received a letter with a British postmark. "It was from a woman telling me it was quite possible that I was her son. She asked me to look at my left wrist to see if there was a burn mark, which she knew happened to me as a four-year-old. I knew then the letter was from my mother." He didn't, though, want to live with her. "She was a stranger to me – I hadn't see her since I was four."But he went to London to meet her, and stayed. For all the love that Zigi now professes for Britain, he felt lonely in London. Then one day he went to a dance at a club for young Holocaust survivors in Belsize Park in London. "I looked round and thought, 'I know him from the ghetto, him from Auschwitz.' I felt as though I had found my family again." More than that: at the club he found a wife – a French Jewish woman called Jeanette to whom he has now been married for 55 years.Years after the war he found out what had happened to his grandmother. "After Auschwitz, we were separated. I found out she died in Theresienstadt on the day of liberation. She didn't have one day of freedom. She was wonderful to me. I would have loved to put my arms around her for one last time."He only returned to Poland about a decade ago. "I went to Auschwitz after being nagged by my children." He recalls standing under the "Arbeit macht frei" sign at the camp entrance, which was stolen and then recovered last year. "It meant nothing to me. I stood under that sign and said: 'After all that Hitler tried to do, he didn't succeed, for I am still here!'"HolocaustSocial historySecond world warStuart Jeffriesguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds guardian.co.uk |
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