Chile’s supreme court has halted
the development of a gold and copper mine owned by the Canadian
conglomerate, Goldcorp, until indigenous communities are consulted.
The court upheld an appeal filed on the El Morro mine by the Diaguita community in northern Chile.
The community said the mine, worth almost $4bn, could pollute a local river.
Several recent mining projects in Chile were blocked after local opposition.
In April, a lower court rejected the Diaguita’s request to halt the
project because, the community said, Goldcorp had not conducted proper
consultations with local communities.
In an interview with Associated Press, a Diaguita leader, Maglene
Campilley said after the Supreme Court ruling, “The Diaguita people are
happy that justice is on the side of the humble, of those who defend
Mother Earth, our water resources and our indigenous land.”
A fresh consultation will now need to take place before an environmental permit can be awarded allowing mining to take place.
Goldcorp has had to suspend construction at the El Morro site twice, once in 2012 and then again in November of 2013.
A company spokesperson, Christine Marks said, “The company remained
committed to open and transparent dialogue with its stakeholders and to
responsible practices in accordance with the highest applicable health,
safety and environmental standards.”
Last year, Chile’s environmental regulator blocked work on the
massive Pascua-Lama gold mine run by Barrick Gold, straddling the
Argentina-Chile border after Diaguita communities living in the
foothills of the Andes downstream opposed it.
With nearly 6m tonnes mined each year, Chile is the world’s chief copper producer but also has huge untapped gold reserves.
In 2012 United States Geological Survey statistics suggested Chile is
now fourth in the world in terms of untapped gold reserves, after
Russia and ahead of the United States.
From Punch
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