Indonesia: World's largest gold mine not benefitting Papua's indigenous people, say activists
Resumo
Data informada: 13 Out 2017
Localização: Indonésia
Empresas
Freeport-McMoRan - Parent CompanyProjetos
Grasberg - UnknownAfetados
Total de pessoas afetadas: Número desconhecido
Comunidade: ( Número desconhecido - Localização desconhecida - Setor desconhecido , Gender not reported )Temas
Ownership of Property & Possessions , Deslocamento , Povos Indígenas , Consulta livre, prévia e informada , Direito à terra , Poluição da água , Poluição do solo , Consulta insuficiente/inadequada , Impacto em áreas notáveis ou protegidas , Impactos nos meios de subsistênciaResposta
Resposta solicitada: Sim, por BHRRC
História contendo resposta (Saiba mais)
Link externo para resposta (Saiba mais)
Tipo de fonte: Lawsuit
Freeport McMoRan Inc. (FCX) and the Indonesian government are currently hashing out the details of a long-term agreement for an extension of the company’s contract to operate the giant Grasberg gold and copper mine in Papua province, due to expire in 2021.
Freeport announced in August that it had agreed to divest a 51 percent stake in its Indonesian subsidiary, PT Freeport Indonesia (PTFI), in which it currently holds a 90.64 percent stake, following sustained pressure by the government to reform a mining sector long seen as not doing enough to benefit local communities or contribute to the national economy...
Indonesia’s National Commission on Human Rights (Komnas HAM), a state-funded body, said earlier this year that PTFI had never compensated the Amungme and the Kamoro as the original stewards of the land where it operates...
PTFI spokesman Riza Pratama said the company manages its waste in accordance with the terms set out in the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) approved by the government in 1997. “We are operating in accordance with our mining contract and [mining waste processing and disposal] has been regulated in it,” he told Mongabay...
The BPK [Indonesia’s Supreme Audit Agency] also found that Freeport had used 4,536 hectares (11,208 acres) of protected forest area without obtaining the proper permits, costing the government $20 million in lost fees between 2008 and 2015.
Riza declined to comment on this finding when asked by Mongabay...
*Sourced by RepRisk due diligence on ESG and business conduct risks, www.reprisk.com.