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GEORGETOWN, Guyana, May 29, 2012 (IPS) - Fabian George drank and generally used water from jungle rivers near his mountainside home for decades until world market prices for gold began climbing in recent years.


"Sometimes we make sure that we catch enough rainwater to use or we would have to search out the creeks for water clean enough to drink," he said, recalling the days when nearby rivers were dark but clear and free of sediment as mining activities were not as ramped up as they are today.
He said the wildlife has also disappeared because of equipment noise, dirty waterways and the exponential increase in human activity, as gold prices had earlier this year threatened to reach 2,000 dollars per troy ounce.
Runaway world prices for gold have pushed Guyana's gold sector to easily leapfrog sugar, rice and bauxite atop the economic totem pole, with investors turning up from as far away as Australia, South Africa, the U.S., Brazil and Canada in particular to cash in on the gold rush in this former British colony of 730,000 people.


Officials estimate that the Caribbean trade bloc headquarters nation has so far attracted investments worth more than a billion dollars in recent years, and this will shoot upwards significantly in the next two years when Toronto-Canada-based Guyana Goldfields opens its mega mine in the Cuyuni District, also near Venezuela.
At least four other companies, most of them Canadian, are close to making similar major intentional mining announcements in the coming months, all banking on the premise that world prices will remain lucrative in the near term.


Early indications are that the mine could produce more than seven million troy ounces of gold or more than twice the amount Canada- based Cambior Inc. produced when it ran Omai mines in western Guyana for 12 years up to 2005. Back then, it was one of the largest operating in South America.
Officials like Joseph Singh, a retired army chief of staff and now chairman of the Geology and Mines Commission, admit that the booming sector now presents regulatory agencies with major administrative and other challenges, as they struggle to enforce regulations, hire enough trained jungle mines inspectors, qualified geologists and other personnel to keep pace, and generally maintain order in a sector that it is tough to regulate because most of its activities are centered in the faraway Amazonian rainforest.
The mines commission is now opening offices in the jungle in an effort to bring regulators nearer goldfields and ensure the environment isn't damaged permanently.


 He said the commission is prepared and has taken swift action to issue "cease work orders" once reports about transgressions reach the city.
"We act swiftly on reports of any transgressions, be it from our own mines officers or even pilots flying overhead and spotting river pollution. Yes, we are facing serious challenges," he said.
Jean La Rose, head of the umbrella Amerindian People's Association (APA), said her association had for weeks been asking for an audience with President Donald Ramotar to outline a long list of complaints about the negative effects of mining, including a stark increase in prostitution, drug and human trafficking, pollution, the inability of Amerindians to consume fish and other marine life and even river mouths being blocked by heavy sedimentation.
As an indication of some of the problems authorities are now forced to confront, interior police investigated nearly 50 bush murders last year, about 40 more than normal, many from fights over gold and women, or from drunken rum sprees by miners on time off.


Indications are that this year's murder rate will surpass last year given current trends, including the murder of a 16-year-old mining camp prostitute in the interior last week, at the end of a love triangle gone awry.
Sensing they are losing the battle, the natural resources ministry risked aggravating Guyana's friendly but powerful neighbour Brazil by recently deporting nearly 100 Brazilians working without documentation, while penalising locals for a slew of transgressions including improper record keeping and mining on river banks.
Officials estimate that Guyana is host to nearly 15,000 Brazilians, many of them illegal miners, chased out by the military from the Venezuelan jungle in the 1990s and pushed southeast to Guyana and neighbouring Suriname where they have settled, invested heavily and provide major regulatory headaches for authorities.


In the southwestern Potaro Region near Brazil, miners have in the past two years twice excavated the main road and uprooted underground state water main pipes while looking for gold, stranding residents on both sides of large craters and cutting off water supplies. Officials seized equipment and warned of prosecution.
Along with the other problems, the mines commission and police say they are forced to cope with a massive smuggling ring to neighbouring Suriname that Natural Resources Minister Robert Persaud says accounts for up to half of the estimated 600,000-plus ounces of gold that small- and medium-scale miners produce annually.
Talks are now ongoing with Surinamese authorities for them to raise the royalty taxes to match Guyana's seven percent to eliminate smuggling, as royalties are currently less than two percent, handing smugglers a hefty profit once they successfully make the 20-minute boat ride across the border Corentyne River.


If that is not enough, a recent World Wildlife Fund study showed significant mercury pollution in the blood of shopkeepers in the jungle who exchange freshly mined gold from miners for rations, and in dozens of jewelers tested, indicating that safety standards are lightly enforced and largely ignored.

(END)

http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=107955

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This is the PPP showing their concern for Amerindian peoples. It is them showing environmental consciousness and ecological preservation. It is the farce of having Jagdeo on the board of Conservation International as wonderkid for environmental preservation.

 

There is no respect from the PPP. They contrive to demoralize and dis-empower Amerindian People's by making them slaves to PPP patronage, dispossessed of any independent voice in the society. Meanwhile Ramotar and his sons and his kit and kin and the PPP gets fat off our lands.

 

The combined opposition has to kill the after election coalition prohibition clause in the electoral system. With that gone a truly independent Amerindian Party can rise and actually control their lives by being a wedge as the AFC currently is.

 

We can only become truly democratic by fragmenting the two major party strong hold with multi party systems and coalition governments. This Indian only or black only party based administration is giving us autocracies, embed parasites like the PPP presently have become and total in-transparent government.

FM

It is a legacy of the PPP regime. They allow murder and poisoning of the Amerindians by foreigners in cahoot with the PPP. At the same time the PPP is blaming the AFC for budget cuts, and with it the plight of the Amerindians. 

The PPP greed will cause great ill health to many of those working in the gold mining sector, and most of the money that Guyana is supposed to to be making from the gold sector is being embezzled. To top it off, the jungle will be permanently damaged. Jagdeo's claims of concern for the environment is not supported by his sale of concessions to flatten and dig up the same forest he has sold off to line his pocket. The lizard called Ramotar is a lame duck president who is not interested in saving Guyana.

Mr.T

Clearly, mining must be done responsibly, but why are high prices negative?  With low prices, we have no business anyway.  It's good Guyana can benefit from high prices.  I'm sure the focus will ensure BJ keeps a high standards after all, he is "Mr Environmental".  So, good luck o them with the high prices.  It cannot be bad for Guyana.

FM

 It simply means that absence the infrastructural resources to monitor mining, the floodgates of illegal due to the lure of quick fortunes. Irresponsible mining can  in short order destroy already stressed habitats. The PPP knows of this for a long time. My friend at the Guyana journal had a piece some 10 years ago on the necessity to increase over sight in this area to preserve the environment from denudation and loss of habitat. The riparian zones are the key to ecosystem survival. The kind of mining that goes on are among the most dangerous to the environment and these easily stressed eco systems can collapse in short order. We already saw that with palm trees in these lowland swamps. This cascaded to  stress on many species of animals.

FM

Aall alyuh up deh do is complain an' criticize abie donk hay.  Ms alena06, wy yuh nah come an help or shut yuh lil rass up.  Storm, if yuh tink buck man geh tek avantage, come donk hay an march and mek shore ting done prapa.  Adda dan datt, shut alyuh rass.  Mi juss spenn whole week in di bush.  Me gatt mi druge and mi gafa mek me money bak.

FM

Ms LaRose has been trying to meet the leader of your interloper gang but he, on account of being a bully has refused to see her.  I do not have to come there. There are better people who are already in place and in time the PPP an its thieving lot will know the cost of neglect when their asses are out of power.

 

You can play around all you want at pretending or actually being a drug lord. That is of little relevance to me.

FM
Originally Posted by Stormborn:

Ms LaRose has been trying to meet the leader of your interloper gang but he, on account of being a bully has refused to see her.  I do not have to come there. There are better people who are already in place and in time the PPP an its thieving lot will know the cost of neglect when their asses are out of power.

 

You can play around all you want at pretending or actually being a drug lord. That is of little relevance to me.

Storm, doon tek yuh rass paass me, me gah druge, druggin' fuh gold.  Me natt in nuttin illegal.  Me dozz pay mi tax an mi wukkas, so nah mek rass wid me.

FM
Originally Posted by Stormborn:

Well write in English or I wont mistake druge for drugs. Were I in charge I would ban all dredging and high power water hoses.

 

If you are a miner then you pollute. There is no getting around it.

Well bai, wah mi gon seh.  If me bin incharge, nuff tings different too.  Bu we seh wan ting from outside, anada from inside.  Looko yuh bai Abama ah change e' mout nuff nuff.  Dem witeman mek e' bassidy.

FM

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