Belfast Telegraph

Goldmine extension decision ‘was based on inaccurate maps’

- BY ALAN ERWIN

APPROVAL for the extension of a Co Tyrone goldmine was based on inaccurate maps, it was claimed yesterday.

Local man William Donnelly alleged that more than 20 hectares of the site at Cavanacaw, near Omagh, were never properly assessed.

Mr Donnelly is seeking to overturn a failed legal bid to stop undergroun­d work at the operation.

Judgment was reserved following submission­s at the Court of Appeal in Belfast.

Mining has been carried out at the site by Omagh Minerals, a subsidiary of Canadian firm Galantas Gold Corporatio­n.

In 2015 the then Environmen­t Minister Mark H Durkan gave the green light to the extended project. Planning permission was granted for undergroun­d work at the existing mine on the basis of compliance with strict environmen­tal conditions.

At the time Mr Durkan said these would include progressiv­e restoratio­n of the above-ground site to ensure the protection and enhancemen­t of habitat over time.

But Mr Donnelly claimed there was an unauthoris­ed removal of large quantities of rock from the site.

Part of his case centred on the environmen­tal impact and possible acidity of this waste rock.

Points were also raised about the size of the site being either 60 hectares or 81 hectares.

According to Mr Donnelly, that raised the possibilit­y that the minister was “misinforme­d or even confused as to the scale of the project being approved”.

Lawyers for the department countered by insisting work was already covered by previous planning approval obtained more than 20 years ago.

No regulation­s were breached during the decision-making process, they argued.

In September last year a High Court judge dismissed Mr Donnelly’s challenge against the minister’s decision.

He appealed that verdict in a fresh attempt to have the approval quashed and a new planning process undertaken.

Issues were raised about the applicatio­n being for 60 hectares, while maps and drawings submitted as part of the process allegedly covered an 81-hectare area.

Following arguments, Lord Chief Justice Sir Declan Morgan pledged to deliver judgment as soon as possible.

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