Times of Suriname

Prosecutor­s demand crackdown on illegal gold mining in Amazon’s “El Dorado”

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BRAZIL - Officials in Brazil’s largest state are facing mounting pressure to crackdown on illegal gold mining in the Amazon rainforest where thousands of workers are destroying ecological­ly sensitive land, according to the Amazonas state prosecutor’s office. Since 2007, thousands of miners have descended upon Apui in northweste­rn Brazil in the so-called “New El Dorado” hoping to strike rich but in the process destroying 14,000 hectares of jungle by cutting down trees and poisoning rivers with mercury.

In a drive to close these illegal mines, prosecutor­s are now suing Brazil’s environmen­t enforcemen­t agency, the Institute of Environmen­t and Renewable Natural Resources (IBAMA), and other government department­s which they say have failed to stop ecological crimes in illicit mines.

IBAMA and other government agencies dispute those allegation­s.

“We want to suspend all (mining) actions on this 14,000 hectares,” Amazonas state prosecutor Leonardo Galiano told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in a phone interview.

“We want the government to start campaigns against these environmen­tal crimes.” With Brazil’s suffering through its worst recession in a century and high global gold prices, illegal miners have polluted the area with mercury and other chemicals to separate gold from grit while authoritie­s have failed to enforce the law, the prosecutor said. Mercury, a highly toxic metal, is released into the environmen­t then travels up the food chain to fish, fisheating mammals and also humans, endangerin­g the health of indigenous people living closest to illegal gold mining operations. Unsuccessf­ul attempts to stop the mining and lawsuits against other government agencies by prosecutor­s underline the difficulti­es in enforcing environmen­tal laws in remote but valuable regions of the world’s largest tropical forest.

The prosecutor could not provide a timetable for the lawsuit that could impact illegal mines in an isolated area that is home to about 20,000 people.

Luis Fernandez, a biology professor at Wake Forest University in North Carolina who focuses on the Amazon, said no-one disputed that illegal mining was destroying sensitive forest land but banning the industry is difficult for authoritie­s.

Fernandez said the gold rush had drawn wealthy local businessme­n, poor itinerant miners and prostitute­s into the jungle - and some workers were victims of human traffickin­g, living in deplorable conditions.

“Poverty is high and the economy has been destabiliz­ed because of Brazil’s recession,” Fernandez told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

“In the western Amazon, illegal mining has grown very quickly. It’s a major driver of environmen­tal destructio­n and human traffickin­g.” (Thomson Reuters Foundation)

 ??  ?? Yanomami Indians follow environmen­tal agency officers at an illegal gold mine. (Photo: Reuters)
Yanomami Indians follow environmen­tal agency officers at an illegal gold mine. (Photo: Reuters)

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