Romania is
currently witnessing the largest environmental protests in its post-Communist
history. Across the country, thousands of people have taken to the streets in
protest of Europe's largest gold mine.
"They
take our gold, and we get cyanide," they shout. Demonstrators that range
from environmentalists to parents with their children, students, poorly clad
pensioners, and well-off looking middle class citizens have been protesting in
Bucharest for days now. Their signs read: "Treason in exchange for a bit
of money!" "Culture instead of cyanide!"
These
people fear that the use of poisonous substances in the Rosia Montana mining
project will cause severe damage. Activists have blocked a central square in
Bucharest. The protests are to continue for the next week.
"It is
great to see that social consciousness is ever growing here, and that it is
manifesting itself on the street," Green Member of Parliament, Remus
Cernea, told DW.
A lot of
gold and a lot of money
Romanian
environmental organizations called the protests after the government gave the
go-ahead to the project last week. The Rosia Montana gold mine, Europe's largest,
had been on hold for the past 14 years. It now awaits approval from parliament,
which is set to vote on the project later this month.
President
Traian Basescu, who in the past has openly supported the project, said this
week that the protests were "justified." He even said that calling a
referendum on the project was being considered.
Earlier,
Prime Minister Victor Ponta gave a similar statement: As the head of the
government, Ponta said he was bound to support the project. On a personal
level, however, the prime minister said he was against the operation and that
he would vote against it in parliament.
The
Romanian-Canadian Firm Rosia Montana Gold Corporation (RMGC) is looking to
extract some 300 tons of gold and 1600 tons of silver from the mine, located in
northern Romania. The process includes the use of cyanide, one of the main
sources of anger among protesters.
The company
says it looks to begin operations by 2016, should it receive parliamentary
approval. According to estimates, the mine could produce a profit of $2.3
billion (1.74 billion euros).
Historians object to the planned destruction of ancient mine shafts created in the Communist era |
Activists'
concerns
The RMGC's
chief investors include the American billionaires John Paulson and Thomas
Kaplan as well as the Israeli diamond mogul Beny Steinmetz. In spite of lacking
approval for the project, the company has already invested hundreds of millions
of dollars, and a significant chunk of Rosia Montana's population has already
been resettled. Some residents, however, continue to refuse to sell their
property and homes to RMGC.
For the
mining to go forward, the valley surrounding the village of Rosia Montana must
be cleared completely to create room for the enormous reservoirs intended to
store waste water and mud that contain cyanide and heavy metals. Environmental
activists fear that the groundwater could be contaminated along the way,
though. Furthermore, they warn that constant explosions in the area could lead
the reservoir walls to collapse.
Politicians
bought off?
"This
project is a huge environmental mess," said Eugen David, a farmer from
Rosia Montana and head of the NGO Alburnus Maior, which opposes the mining
plans.
Ex-culture
minister and Democratic Liberal Theodor Paleologu agrees, saying, "The
project is technically dubious, the law behind it is against the constitution
because it ignores property laws as well as the interests of the Romanian
state, and it has corrupted many politicians."
It is,
indeed, true that many Romanian politicians in recent years have done a
surprising turnaround on the project, including head of state Victor Ponta,
who, while a member of the opposition, was a vocal critic of the plans.
Rosia
Montana Gold Corporation denies having bribed any politicians. However, the
RMGC invested a great deal of money in a PR campaign in recent years intended
to convince the Romanian public of the usefulness of the project as well as a
purported lack of environmental concerns associated with it.
The protests have extended around the world, like here in London |
Fears of a
repeat catastrophe
A majority
of Romanians remain opposed to the prospect of mining gold with cyanide. They
arguably have reason for concern. A cyanide accident in the year 2000 in the
northern Romanian city of Baia Mare occurred after days of rainfall led a
reservoir to burst. In the aftermath, 100,000 tons of mud containing cyanide
and heavy metals flowed into the Tisza and Danube rivers, resulting in one of
the most serious environmental catastrophes in European history.
Along with
the residents in and around Baia Mare, Hungary emerged as a principal victim of
that disaster. There, nearly all life was extinguished within several hundred kilometers
of the Tisza.
Hungary
fears that such a scenario could repeat itself, and its government has
repeatedly issued protest against the Rosia Montana project. On Monday
(02.09.2013), Budapest again called on the Romanian government to stop the
project.
"Gold
mining with the use of cyanide technology involves serious environmental risks,
endangers groundwater and bodies of water as well as biodiversity, as the
citizens of Romania and Hungary experienced first-hand during the Baia Mare
catastrophe," Hungary's Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement on
the matter.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.