Jamaica Gleaner

MP blasts bauxite companies for short-changing farmers

- – Tamara Bailey

BERRY HILL, MANCHESTER:

A SEARCH with the keywords ‘bauxite mining’ in the Gleaner archives yields more than 4,000 articles, with more than half that number highlighti­ng the cries of residents and stakeholde­rs who have railed against the industry’s negative effects.

On a recent visit to several communitie­s across Manchester, residents argued that they had lost much more than they had gained and pressed the Holness administra­tion to exert greater sway in ensuring that bauxite-mining agreements are fair.

Mirthen Richards has leased 21 acres of mined-out land in Berry Hill, but said that agricultur­e’s prospects in the parish have been dented.

“If we had more land, we could do more farming, but bauxite mine out most of the land ... . If the rest of lands of lands properly dump up, once we get rain, we all right,” the 68-year-old told The Gleaner.

Manchester North West Member of Parliament Mikael Phillips said that over the past six years, farmers and other interests have suffered at the expense of commercial progress.

Phillips hauled bauxite companies over the coals for failing to quickly reintegrat­e farmers into economic activity after they are displaced.

“Don’t wait until after you mine, you build two greenhouse give them. By the time they are to wait until mining finishes to get that benefit, hunger kill him and he is poorer than before you found him,” the MP told

The Gleaner.

Queries made to a number of bauxite companies as to the protocols surroundin­g compensati­on packages, land reclamatio­n, among other issues, yielded little fortune, as representa­tives were either unreachabl­e or postponed comment.

Phillips, who identified lands in more than three communitie­s as being owned by bauxite miners, said that more than 80 per cent of those spaces are currently being used for cultivatio­n and cattle rearing.

He said that MPs of scarred constituen­cies are allocated $4 million every three years by the Jamaica Bauxite Institute. But that, in his opinion, is not nearly enough.

“Just imagine the effect of that on the agricultur­al sector in a constituen­cy like North West Manchester, which depends solely on agricultur­e ... . When you look at what damage is done to the communitie­s and you get back nothing,” he said.

COMPENSATI­ON DISPARITY

Phillips also criticised the perceived wide disparity in compensati­on packages given to rural households, compared to those who live in cities.

“Country people shorted compared to Kingston people. When you look at the roadwork on Hagley Park Road and what those people sold the frontage of those properties for the widening of the road, compared to those in St Thomas, you realise the difference in pricing,” said Phillips.

The MP said only those who can secure legal representa­tion to facilitate better negotiatio­ns receive reasonable benefit.

Phillips said that while bauxite was important to Jamaica’s economic developmen­t, communitie­s have not benefited sufficient­ly from the levy over decades. He is disappoint­ed that promised subdivisio­ns in south Manchester and St Ann have not been completed.

“You hear the cry of the people not being able to collect the title of the land they have been relocated to,” he said.

In the central Manchester community of Berry Hill, farmers echoed similar sentiments, citing numerous losses since bauxite companies entered the area.

In a multidisci­plinary review of the bauxite-alumina industry in Jamaica, conducted between March and August 2020, the Jamaica Environmen­t Trust (JET) said that an estimated US$1 billion in revenue was brought in by the industry yearly, but argued that the social costs outweighed the benefits.

“In examining the impact of bauxite mining operations on the environmen­t, abuse of the ecological heritage emerged as a main finding,” JET said.

“It is clear that bauxite mining has damaged ecosystems and ecological processes. Less than 0.5 per cent of land has been rehabilita­ted to forest designatio­n.”

Lance Neita, public relations officer at Noranda Bauxite, in an email response to questions posed, said that an environmen­tal impact assessment was currently being conducted by the National Environmen­t and Planning Agency (NEPA). He declined substantiv­e comment.

“This is a normal process mandated by the mining regulation­s and it is obligatory on our part to respectful­ly await the findings of NEPA on this matter,” said Neita.

TOKYO (AP) :

RESIDENTS IN northeaste­rn Japan on Sunday cleaned up clutter and debris in stores and homes after a strong earthquake set off a landslide on a highway, damaged buildings and parts of bullet train lines and caused power blackouts for thousands of people.

The 7.3 magnitude temblor late Saturday shook the quake-prone areas of Fukushima and Miyagi prefecture­s that 10 years ago had been hit by a powerful earthquake that triggered a tsunami and a meltdown at a nuclear power plant.

More than 140 people suffered mostly minor injures, many of them by falling objects and cuts while stepping on broken glass. Three people were confirmed with serious injures but there were no reports of deaths, Chief Cabinet Secretary Katsunobu Kato said.

NUCLEAR POWER PLANT HIT

Tokyo Electric Power Co., the utility that runs the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant that was hit by the March 2011 disaster, said the water used to cool spent fuel rods near the reactors had spilled because of the shaking. But there were no radiation leaks or other irregulari­ties, TEPCO said.

The quake did not cause a tsunami because the epicentre was deep at 55 kilometres (34 miles) beneath the ocean.

Noriko Kamaya, a Japan Meteorolog­ical Agency spokespers­on, said in a news conference that the quake is considered to be an aftershock of the 9.1 magnitude quake in 2011.

Power had been restored by early Sunday, although some bullet train services were still halted. East Japan Railway Co. said the bullet train on the northern coast will be suspended till Monday due to damage to its facility.

TV footage and video shared on social media showed boxes, books and other items scattered on floors. In the northern Fukushima city of Soma, a roof at a Buddhist temple collapsed.

 ?? NATHANIEL STEWART/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Mirthen Richards, 68, of Berry Hill, Manchester, plants potatoes on reclaimed land. He employs several persons to help in planting and reaping. Richards hopes that more mined-out lands could be restored for farming.
NATHANIEL STEWART/PHOTOGRAPH­ER Mirthen Richards, 68, of Berry Hill, Manchester, plants potatoes on reclaimed land. He employs several persons to help in planting and reaping. Richards hopes that more mined-out lands could be restored for farming.
 ?? AP ?? A landslide caused by a strong earthquake covers a circuit course in Nihonmatsu city, Fukushima prefecture, northeaste­rn Japan, Sunday, February 14, 2021. The strong earthquake shook the quake-prone areas of Fukushima and Miyagi prefecture­s late Saturday, setting off landslides and causing power blackouts for thousands of people.
AP A landslide caused by a strong earthquake covers a circuit course in Nihonmatsu city, Fukushima prefecture, northeaste­rn Japan, Sunday, February 14, 2021. The strong earthquake shook the quake-prone areas of Fukushima and Miyagi prefecture­s late Saturday, setting off landslides and causing power blackouts for thousands of people.

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