News ReportsMay 12, 2006 12:13 pm

http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/MAN170212.htm
08 May 2006 09:38:37 GMT
Source: Reuters

MANILA, May 8 (Reuters) - The Philippines’ largest Muslim separatist rebel group said on Monday it was not keen on allowing mining firms in its territories and that the issue will be part of its peace negotiations with the government.

The Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) issued the statement after it ended informal talks with the Philippine government in Malaysia on Thursday without resolving the stubborn issue of territory and jurisdiction over Muslim land on Mindanao island.
“This mining issue has to be discussed bilaterally,” MILF spokesman Eid Kabalu told Reuters by phone. (more…)

News Reports 11:02 am

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/in_depth/4760707.stm

Gold mining carries social and environmental costs for many developing countries, a British aid agency has warned in a new campaign.

Cafod says most gold mining takes place in developing states, where it pollutes water, displaces poor communities and damages traditional livelihoods.

The warning comes amid rising costs of gold, most of which goes for jewellery.
Cafod wants mining companies and jewellery retailers to sign a set of standards so gold is mined responsibly.

But some aid agencies such as Oxfam support the sale of gold reserves to finance debt relief.
A report last year by the World Gold Council found that the industry brought “substantial improvement” in social and financial infrastructure.

Most mining companies tried to take on local workers and source supplies locally, while royalty and tax revenues from the business contributed to government coffers, the WGC said.

‘Dirty’ industry

Buyers should be made more aware of the impact of a taste for gold, Cafod - a Roman Catholic charity - said in a report published on Wednesday.

“Gold mining is one of the world’s dirtiest industries,” the report said.
“Gold is a symbol of wealth and power,” but “for many developing countries, the discovery… has led to little but poverty and hardship,” it said.

Mining can generate revenue and create jobs, but it can also “cause lasting damage to communities and to the environment”, Cafod argued.
Gold mining has also been closely linked to conflict, the charity noted - “whether as a result of fighting over the control of precious natural resources or divisions within communities affected by mining”.

Toxic process

About three-quarters of the world’s known gold has already been mined, and Cafod argues there will be costs for those living above the remaining quarter.
After moving the people, open-cast gold mining involves pouring cyanide solutions onto large areas of countryside. It draws gold out of the rocks but also brings out toxic substances including arsenic.

The process uses huge quantities of water and can contaminate the water table for other users.
In poor countries like Honduras and Central America or Congo in Central Africa, Cafod says local people who live on the land have been moved out and poisoned by polluted water from the mines.

News Reports 8:38 am

May 10, 2006
By Bobby Labalan, Inquirer

Editor’s Note: Published on Page A13 of the May 11, 2006 issue of the
Philippine Daily Inquirer

SORSOGON CITY-The head of the University of the Philippines-Manila
(UP-Manila) Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology had assured
Sorsogon officials that there is no scientific proof that heavy metals are
present in the body of residents of five towns earlier subjected to a study by
their group.

The assurance was relayed by Dr. Nelia Cortez-Maramba to Dr. Edgar
Garcia, Sorsogon provincial health officer, who called on her at her office to
discuss the issue, following reports quoting the UP professor as saying
that residents of five Sorsogon towns were positive for heavy metals.

Maramba told the Sorsogon official that she was misquoted by reporters
as she had not given the independent commission, which was investigating
the Lafayette mining operation, any conclusive testimony when she was
summoned to testify.

Garcia said the UP professor’s assurance would allay any fears that the
report could generate.

“We must be very careful about this issue as we don’t want any repeat
of the fish scare which would surely cripple the livelihood of our already
poor fishermen,” he said.

Garcia was sent to Manila by Gov. Raul Lee to see Maramba so he could
clarify the issue.

News Reports 8:27 am

http://www.tribune.net.ph/business/20060512bus7.html
http://www.manilastandardtoday.com/?page=business02_may12_2006
05/12/2006

Lafayette Phils. is asking the government to allow it to test-run its Rapu-Rapu processing operations prior to a full restart, saying any further delay will have a significant effect on the company’s finances, its host communities, and on investor confidence. (more…)