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報告

2020年4月1日

作者:
Human Rights Law Centre

After the mine: Living with Rio Tinto’s deadly legacy

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Human rights violations

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People living throughout the mine’s impact zone report that community members have died, or have been placed in life-threatening situations, as a result of the massive changes which the mine has wrought in their local environment.

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This report, as well as previous studies on the mine, have recorded consistent accounts by people that they develop sores and ulcers, diarrhoea and vomiting, respiratory problems and pregnancy complications from contact with the water or consumption of fish from the rivers.

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Almost all Panguna residents interviewed for this report cited water insecurity and anxieties about the unknown health risks of living near or consuming contaminated water as some of their most fundamental concerns.

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...[T]he mine’s activities have undermined their basic access to food, without real redress or a framework for respecting this right. Villages have lost arable land with historic reports that the areas of land suitable for gardening in some villages ‘has decreased by as much as 90%’.

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For the affected communities, the mine’s operations have led to the destruction of cemeteries, consequent disconnection from their ancestors, and continuing destruction of their sacred sites, as flooding and mud flows release torrents of mine waste into their cultural landscapes.

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These impacts...also infringe the specific rights of rural women...‘to enjoy adequate living conditions, particularly in relation to housing, sanitation, …and water supply rights’.

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The mine’s impacts have also had serious consequences for children’s rights to education and future livelihoods.

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