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B.C. Committee for Human Rights in the Philippines (BCCHRP)
Media Release
Mining giant Placer Dome continues to deny responsibility for
Philippine mining disaster
April 27, 2005
(Vancouver, B.C.) - Despite being taken to task by a local Philippine
solidarity group, Placer Dome CEO Peter Tomsett did not hesitate to deny
responsibility for the clean-up and compensation of victims after the
notorious 1996 Marcopper mining disaster in Marinduque, Philippines.
Although Marcopper was a partnership between Placer Dome and former
Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos, Tomsett proclaimed the company's
innocence and maintained that they had nothing to do with the disaster.
May Farrales, BCCHRP member, raised a question at the company's annual
meeting of shareholders yesterday in Vancouver about the company's
well-documented poor record of clean-up and compensation.
Recently,
OXFAM Australia released a report condemning the company's toxic legacy
in the Philippines. Instead, Tomsett told the meeting that Placer Dome
has gone above and beyond its duty and no longer sees the necessity for
compensation and rehabilitation.
In 1996, four million tonnes of mine tailings from the Marcopper mine
flowed into the main river on the island of Marinduque.
This massive
mining disaster brought international attention to the dangers of
large-scale foreign mining and the scandalous practices of Placer Dome.
Preceding the 1996 disaster were the dumping of tailings in Calancan Bay
between 1987 and 1991; and a 1993 collapse that killed two children.
Geologists warn of another disaster if the remaining tailing dams are
not immediately rehabilitated.
Today, nine years after the 1996 disaster, the people of Marinduque,
Philippines, are still crying for justice from the mining giant. They
cite health problems, loss of livelihood, displacement and living in
constant fear of another disaster as issues that Placer Dome must answer
for.
"It's not at all surprising that Placer Dome is trying to escape its
liability and responsibility by distancing itself from one of the worst
mining disasters in history," explains Farrales. "Under the
globalization agenda, it is far too easy for such multinational mining
corporations to plunder the national resources and patrimony of the
Third World and enrich themselves with the profits - and then suddenly
divest themselves of their assets and responsibilities when it is no
longer profitable or expedient." Farrales noted that Placer Dome
conveniently sold its Philippine assets in 1997 and 2001.
Currently, the
company owns 17 mines in seven countries around the world.
Barbara Waldern, Chairperson of BCCHRP, who toured the Marinduque
disaster site in 1998, stated, "In light of its announcement today of
$31 million in earnings in the first quarter of 2005 alone and reports
from the people of Marinduque that they received only 1000 Philippine
pesos (approximately $22 Canadian) in compensation for the death of a
child, Placer Dome's position is completely unacceptable and obscene."
Waldern added, "We will continue to bring the cries for justice of the
Filipino people to the attention of the Canadian people and the
international community and name Placer Dome for the 'ugly Canadian'
that it is." #
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