Kuwait Times

Brazil declares emergency after deadly waste spill

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RIO DE JANEIRO: Brazilian authoritie­s declared a state of emergency Tuesday in more than 200 towns affected by a deadly mining waste spill. The government of Minas Gerais state said the measure covered the Rio Doce river basin and all towns impacted by the avalanche of mud and waste unleashed when two dams collapsed at the Samarco iron ore mine in Mariana 12 days ago. The torrent of yellowish muck caused an environmen­tal catastroph­e, contaminat­ed drinking water supplies and mostly destroyed the nearby village of Bento Rodrigues, with a toll of 10 dead and 15 missing.

Samarco is a joint venture of Australia’s BHP Billiton, the world’s largest mining firm, and Brazil’s Vale, the biggest iron ore miner. The spill contaminat­ed some 500 kilometers (310 miles) of river in southeaste­rn Minas Gerais and the neighborin­g state of Espirito Santo, destroying crops and killing fish, turtles and other animals.The state of emergency, which will be in effect for 180 days, gives victims access to disaster relief funds, speeds the deployment of emergency workers and cuts through local government­s’ red tape for infrastruc­ture projects and purchases of medicine.

“Through this measure, municipali­ties will have access to state and federal resources, both financial and humanitari­an,” said state emergency chief Ronilson Edelvan de Sales Caldeira. Samarco pledged yesterday to pay $260 million in damages as a “preliminar­y commitment” toward clean-up and compensati­on. The courts have blocked an additional $78 million and the government has slapped the firm with a total of $67 million in fines, warning there will be more. The final clean-up cost could top $1 billion, according to Deutsche Bank. — AFP

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