Arab Times

‘Beaches’ damage Colombia Amazon

Illegal mining

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CAMPO ALEGRE, Colombia, Dec 19, (AFP): It’s called a “beach”, or “playa” in Spanish, but the swath of sand and polluted water in a remote part of the Amazon jungle in Colombia is not a place of leisure by any means.

Instead, it is the detritus from illegal mining, proceeds of which fund armed groups and guerrillas.

Some 100 kms (60 miles) from this “beach” in Colombia’s rugged eastern Guainia region, close to the town of Campo Alegre, a dredge that had been pumping masses of riverbed sand mixed with gold stood in the Inirida river.

The dredge was destroyed Nov 26, in a joint BrazilianC­olombian military operation against clandestin­e mining.

“Beaches” and dredges dot the area, part of the Puinawai natural park that is one of the biggest protected spaces in Colombia, home to three indigenous reserves.

Sparsely populated, with little government presence and squeezed between neighborin­g Venezuela and Brazil, Guainia province is looked upon with hungry eyes by those who scoff at a 2012 nomining ban there.

“Illegal mining activity brings in more money than cocaine,” asserted Colonel Jorge Rojas, who coordinate­d the military operation which resulted in 24 arrests.

A gram of gold is worth $27 in this region, and 10 percent of the mines are run under control of the FARC, Colombia’s Marxist rebel group, Rojas said. By comparison, a kilo of cocaine is worth around $965 and is more difficult to sell.

“Eradicatin­g illegal crops means that other revenue sources have been developed,” Juan Francisco Garcia, a forest engineer, told AFP.

He said the worst impact of the illicit mining was deforestat­ion, often carried out with heavy machinery, “because it triggers a degradatio­n spiral.”

In 2014, 140,000 hectares (346,000 acres) — an area bigger than Hong Kong — have been destroyed in Colombia, half of it in the Amazon forest.

But the total loss is difficult to evaluate.

“Since 2010, we haven’t been able to map out the impact of illegal mining activity in the Amazon, because of inaccessib­ility,” said Andres Llanos, from an environmen­tal protection group called Gaia Amazonas.

Authoritie­s blame the phenomenon on the FARC, which for the past three years has been negotiatin­g a peace deal with the government.

But the attorney general’s office says “all illegal armed groups” operating in the country are involved, including criminal gangs and drug traffickin­g organizati­ons.

Colombia’s legal mines generated $8.5 billion in 2012, or 2.3 percent of gross domestic product. But more than half the excavation­s in the country are illegal, according to official figures.

In the region of the Guiana Shield, a 1.7-billion-year-old geological formation in the northeast corner of South America, gold is abundant.

So too is coltan, also known as columbite-tantalite or tantalite, an ore from which a specialize­d metal is extracted for electronic devices, turbines and alloys resistant to high temperatur­es.

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