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Artigo

9 Jun 2022

Author:
Varney Kamara, The DayLight (Liberia)

Liberia: Communities blame mining company’s waste facility for river pollution; includes company comments

‘Cape Mount Villagers Face Hardship after River Pollution’ 1 June 2022

During the early morning hours of Monday last week, Mustapha Pabai, the town chief of Jikando, received a call from a neighbor that rivers in the area may have been poisoned. Pabai learned that dead fishes were floating in the Varwor River, where he and other villagers fish and fetch water. After going there himself, there were dead fish everywhere on the waterfront. There was also the corpse of a hunting dog that had eaten some of the dead fish. Stunned by what he had seen, Pabai called local journalists and told them the news. Within no time, pictures of the dead animals began making rounds on social media.

…Locals blame the pollution on a Bea Mountain Mining Company waste facility. The company has the facility right outside its New Liberty Gold Mine and has a connection to the Weaju River which forms a common boundary with the Varwor River in Jikando. It then empties into the Mafa River in Gormah, from where Pabai received that call about the pollution. “I blame Bea Mountain for what happened because they are the only company close to us,” says Jeema Pabai, the wife of the town chief and leader of the women of Jikando. “Our whole life has been carried backward because of this thing,” says James Kamara, an elder.

Bea Mountain denies any wrongdoing, saying in a statement a day after news of the pollution broke out, “that no abnormal conditions have taken place in its plant. “There is also no discharge from the plant. All protocols in keeping with EPA guidelines and best practice are intact.” The statement added that the company was investigating the incident. The company has been distributing water in affected villages. If the suspicion of villagers proves true, it would be the second time Bea Mountain operations would have led to pollution in that region. In this same month in 2016, spillage from the company’s waste facility polluted water sources in the area. The company at the time claimed at the time the incident did not affect people but villagers said it caused them rashes. Bea Mountain risks a USD$50,000 fine or imprisonment of at most 20 years as required by the Environmental Protection and Management Law of Liberia. Pabai said he had to convince around a dozen villagers not to leave the town, asking them to wait for the findings of the EPA’s investigation.