Stabroek News

Canada to create overseas mining watchdog early in 2018

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(Reuters) - Ottawa plans early next year to create an independen­t office to oversee Canadian mining, oil and gas companies’ activities abroad, a government spokesman said on Tuesday, a move that environmen­tal and human rights groups have long demanded.

The office would have both an “advisory and robust investigat­ive mandate,” a spokesman for Canadian Trade Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne said in an email.

The move would fulfill a 2015 campaign promise by Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberal Party to appoint an extractive industries’ watchdog.

Nearly two-thirds of the world’s public mining companies are listed in Canada, while Canadian mining and exploratio­n companies were present in 102 foreign countries in 2015, according to Canadian government data.

Non-government groups have called for years for greater oversight of Canadian mining companies abroad following a number of environmen­tal incidents and accusation­s of human rights abuses, including that of forced labor at Canadian miner Nevsun Resources’ mine in Eritrea. Nevsun has denied the allegation­s.

Trudeau’s predecesso­r, Conservati­ve Stephen Harper, establishe­d a Corporate Social Responsibi­lity Counselor in 2009, but critics have said it is toothless as the office focuses mainly on facilitati­ng dialogue between companies and affected communitie­s.

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