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Romania PM admits 'controversial' decision on gold mine
by Staff Writers
Bucharest (AFP) Sept 02, 2013


Thousands protest in Romania against shale gas, gold mine
Bucharest (AFP) Sept 01, 2013 - Thousands of people took to the streets of Romania on Sunday to protest against shale gas exploration and a controversial Canadian gold mine project using cyanide.

Protesters also lashed out at the government and the president for supporting these controversial projects.

In Bucharest, between 4,000, according to the police, and 7,000 people, according to organisers walked between the central University Square and the government building, shouting slogans against a gold mine project planned by Canadian company Gabriel resources in the village of Rosia Montana, in the heart of Transylvania.

The open-cast mine would be the biggest in Europe, according to the company.

The project has triggered fierce opposition as the mine would use an average of 12,000 tonnes of cyanide a year in a leaching process, destroy four mountains and threaten to partially damage Roman mining galleries.

The company says European environment regulations will be respected.

"We don't want cyanide", protesters, mainly young people and families, shouted.

In the evening, they organised a sit-in on one of Bucharest's main avenues, partially blocking traffic.

"We hope we can save Rosia Montana", Irina Enea, a jewellery designer who came to protest with her husband and two children, told AFP.

"We are angry because the right to a safe environment is violated and because the government adopted a draft law saying the mine is of national interest", she added.

Romania's government on Tuesday approved a draft law granting national interest status to the Canadian gold mine project.

The draft law will have to get approval from Parliament to be valid.

Protests also took place in several other Romanian cities gathering hundreds of people each.

In Barlad (north-east), more than 3,500 people gathered to protest shale gas drilling plans by US giant Chevron.

They oppose the controversial drilling technique known as hydraulic fracturing or "fracking" which involves injecting huge amounts of water, mixed with sand and chemicals, at high pressures to break up rock formations and release the gas.

"We inherited a clean land from our ancestors. Our duty is to transmit as clean (a landscape) to our children and grandchildren but if Chevron proceeds with shale gas, they will poison the land", 86-year-old Mihai Berlea said.

Chevron says it will respect "the highest standards in terms of safety and environmental protection".

"Many protesters took to the streets today not only because of environmental concerns but because they feel they have been betrayed", sociologist Mircea Kivu told AFP, recalling that rhe ruling centre left coalition was against these two projects while in opposition.

Romanian Prime Minister Victor Ponta Monday admitted a draft law on Europe's largest open-cast gold mine was "controversial" but said his government would press ahead regardless.

Ponta said at the weekend he would not himself vote for the law to open the mine, despite having steered it through parliament, in keeping with a promise he made in opposition when he strongly objected to the mine.

His position drew ridicule from local media, with the front page of the Adevarul daily reading: "MP Ponta will vote against PM Ponta".

Between 9,000 and 12,000 people took to the streets of Romania Sunday to protest against the law which grants "national interest status" to the gold mine project planned by Canada's Gabriel Resources in the Transylvanian village of Rosia Montana.

The designation makes it easier for the government to expel villagers living around the site of the mine and circumvent regulations that would slow its opening.

"I have taken a courageous though controversial decision," Ponta told a press conference.

The centre-left prime minister said his government had obtained better terms during negotiations with the company, including stricter environmental protection guarantees and a rise in royalties from four to six percent.

A government stake in the company exploiting the mine would also rise from 20 percent to 25 percent.

The project has triggered fierce opposition due to its potentially harmful effects on health and the environment.

The mine would use an average of 12,000 tonnes of poisonous cyanide a year in a leaching process, destroy four mountains, and could cause the collapse of ancient Roman gold mines.

Gabriel Resources says European environmental regulations will be respected.

But residents and environmentalists have called on lawmakers to vote against the plans.

Ponta criticised his predecessors for deferring a decision on the mine project, which would become the biggest of its kind in Europe.

The prime minister added that parliament would have the final say on the mine, as his centre-right rival President Traian Basescu on Monday reiterated his support for the mine.

"I continue to believe this would be an opportunity for Romania," Basescu said in an interview with a newspaper, adding that he had considered calling a referendum on the project.

Gabriel Resources acquired a mining licence for Rosia Montana in 1999 but has been waiting ever since for a crucial permit from the ministry of environment.

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