Jump to content

Phichit: Health of locals ‘seriously affected by contamination from gold mine’


webfact

Recommended Posts

Health of locals ‘seriously affected by contamination from gold mine’

By Pratch Rujivanarom 
The Nation 

 

c47e4d15bbaec9d5f86b90c6962a9ef0.jpeg

 

PEOPLE LIVING in the vicinity of the Akara Resources gold mine in Phichit province are complaining that they still have to put up with the contaminated environment, as neither the company nor the authorities have worked to clean up the heavy metals contamination from the gold mine leakage.

 

More than two years since the National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO) ordered the temporary closure of every gold mine in the Kingdom, including the Chatree gold mine, nothing has been done to clean up the environment, while the local people have to fend for themselves, as all assistance was stopped after the mine closure, said Thanyarat Sinthornthammathat, a leader of local gold mine opposition group.

 

Recent blood tests have shown that many local people in the affected areas around the gold mine, including she, have harmful levels of heavy metals in their bloodstream and more and more people are getting sick, Thanyarat said.

 

“Many local people around the gold mine still have to live in a hazardous environment, as both the gold mine company and the relevant agencies have done nothing to tackle the leakage of the gold mine’s TSF1 [the first tailing storage facility] and clean up the contamination in the environment,” she said.

 

“Therefore, the people are still exposed to the leaked heavy metals and cyanide in the environment around us and continue to get sick from these hazardous substances. Even I have been fainting occasionally for several months now.”

 

She said the doctors had diagnosed that she suffered from low blood pressure, but they could not find out the exact cause of the sickness.

 

She revealed that regular clean food and water distribution to the people in the affected areas had been completely stopped for more than two years already, so the people were forced to consume food and water from the contaminated areas.

 

“Our plea to the authorities to help us relocate from the affected areas of the gold mine pollution was also ignored. So, we have no choice but to continue living in this toxic contaminated environment,” she said.

 

Earlier last year, teams of experts formed under working groups of four ministries had come to the conclusion that the Chatree mine’s TSF1 was leaking and Akara Resources was required to fix the leak and ensure environmental restoration at the site.

 

A source from Akara Resources was quoted in Manager Online’s report that the company had not complied with these obligations, because such environmental restoration would require large sums of money. The company would like to get an assurance from the government first that they could reopen the Chatree mine before they begin the environmental restoration.

 

“The reason why we have still not proceeded with environmental restoration at Chatree gold mine is because we do not have an official guarantee that we will be allowed to resume mining at the site; we will need to spend billions of baht for the environmental restoration at this scale,” the source said.

 

“Right now, we already have to bear the heavy financial burden from the gold mine closure and we were forced to lay off most of our workers at the mine until only 36 workers remain.”

 

Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/national/30369660

 

thenation_logo.jpg

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

So...the Thai gov't unilaterally closed the mine.

Has done no cleanups or rehabilitation-even tho' they were shrieking (on the basis of some questionable self sponsored reports) that the mining area was toxic.

Has ignored requests from local people for relocation.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

48 minutes ago, hotchilli said:

But don't let that get in the way of a good profit.

The mine can't profit if it can't operate.

The People's suffering is at the hands of the Prayut government that shut down the mine illegally in the first place by invoking Article 44 to bypass any judicial proceedings and thinking that Article 44 could legally bypass the Australian-Thailand Free Trade Agreement. It can't because of binding arbitration.

As Prayut likely discovered, his Article 44 was irrelevant and mine owner Kingsgate is asking hundreds of millions of baht from the arbitration commission as compensation for the shut down. It otherwise has no business purpose to spend a baht on the mine.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

9 hours ago, webfact said:

Recent blood tests have shown that many local people in the affected areas around the gold mine, including she, have harmful levels of heavy metals in their bloodstream

As bad as it is but how much of her and other's high mercury level is caused by intensive use of whitening creams?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On ‎5‎/‎20‎/‎2019 at 7:50 AM, Lupatria said:

As bad as it is but how much of her and other's high mercury level is caused by intensive use of whitening creams?

So that means in Africa and South America they use those creams too because there they have the same issues with mercury poisoning.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.




×
×
  • Create New...