Diamond Fields Advertiser

Activists face defamation suit by mining company

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THE Centre for Environmen­tal Rights NGO says an Australian company involved in mining in environmen­tally sensitive areas, which it opposes, is suing two of their attorneys for defamation.

It is the second time they are being sued. Spokespers­on Annette Gibbs said that last year holding company MRC and its chief executive officer Mark Caruso sued Cape Town attorney Cormac Cullinan, Amadiba Crisis Committee activist Mzamo Dlamini, and John Clarke, a social worker, for defamation in relation to the company’s involvemen­t at Xolobeni.

The centre says a subsidiary, Mineral Sands Resources (MSR), is now claiming R500 000 in damages. Gibbs said the summons served on Tracey Davies and Christine Reddell, along with a local community activist from the West Coast, Davine Cloete, claimed they had made defamatory statements about MSR and its director, Zamile Qunya, during presentati­ons at UCT’s Summer School in January.

Gibbs said Davies, Reddell and Cloete gave presentati­ons about MSR’s “environmen­tally destructiv­e” Tormin mineral sands mine situated on the West Coast, a bout 350 kilometers north of Cape Town.

Damages

The CER said MSR has claimed R250 000 in damages from each of our attorneys, and a further R750 000 from Cloete. The environmen­tal group said the claims will be “strenuousl­y defended”.

“Strategic lawsuits against public participat­ion, popularly known as “SLAPP” suits, are intended to censor, intimidate and silence critics by burdening them with the cost of a legal defence until they abandon their criticism or opposition. They are also aimed at sending a message to all activists that resisting that company, and others like it, poses personal risk,” said Gibbs.

But yesterday Caruso alleged the CER and certain individual­s made defamatory and unsubstant­iated remarks aimed directly at diminishin­g the company’s core values of ensuring responsibl­e environmen­tal impact and high social and economic value for local communitie­s.

“The company acknowledg­es the right to the freedom of speech and that it must subject itself to public scrutiny. The individual­s and the organisati­ons who have made these remarks have oversteppe­d the boundaries of responsibi­lity, truth and fairness,”he said.

“The company enjoys the same right to defend itself and owes a duty to its stakeholde­rs and employees not to permit these remarks to simply go unanswered.”

MRC has also been at the centre of controvers­y for its intentions to mine nine million tons of ilmenite, used in paints, at an opencast operation on pristine sand dunes in Xolobeni on the Wild Coast close to the KZN-Eastern Cape border.

Tensions between pro- and anti-mining groups in Xolobeni last year reached boiling point which the government found difficult to end. Violence resulted in the killing of Amadiba Crisis Committee chairman Bazooka Radebe, who opposed the mining.

He died in a hail of bullets March last year.

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