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Gold mine backers hail Romania president
by Staff Writers
Rosia Montana, Romania (UPI) Aug 31, 2011

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

Supporters of an effort to build a one of the world's biggest gold mines in Romania say they're encouraged by the public backing of President Traian Basescu.

A pro-mining industry and trade group said Monday it is thrilled with comments made last week by Basescu, who seemed to indicate the chronic waffling of the Romanian government on the controversial Rosia Montana Project is turning into qualified support more than a decade after the $1 billion project was announced.

"We hail the statements for support of the mining project in Rosia Montana made by the president of Romania," a statement from the Group for the Support of the Rosia Montana Project said.

The Romanian group, composed of local public authorities, universities, non-governmental organizations, mining industry associations and trade unions, the project is needed in country's Apuseni Mountains region, the English-language Romanian news Web site ACTMedia reported.

"The reality of Rosia Montana is that it is an underdeveloped area, with mining its only industry," the group said. "(There is a large) unemployed population and 80 percent of its people live at subsistence levels, with youth lacking any perspective."

The project, spearheaded by the Canadian mining company Gabriel Resources Ltd., has encountered stiff resistance from environmentalists and others, mainly because of its massive scale and the use of cyanide.

Rosia Montana, considered a world-class reserve, is estimated to hold gold resources of 10 million ounces and Gabriel has said it plans to produce an average 500,000 ounces a year at a cash cost of $400 an ounce, The Globe and Mail newspaper in Toronto reported.

With price of gold at an all-time high of $1,800 per ounce, the Romanian government is seeing its potential in a different light but is also responding to calls that it get a better deal from the investors.

A mine's controlling company, Rosia Montana Gold Corp., is 19.3 percent-owned by Bucharest through its Minvest Deva while Gabriel Resources holds 80.5 percent and other minority with shareholders control 0.23 percent of the company.

Basescu told an audience at the Danube Delta town of Sulina last week he backed the Rosia Montana gold and silver mining project, given that the world gold prices had risen so high, but that the state's profit-sharing arrangements with Gabriel need to be changed, ACTMedia said.

"I think the Rosia Montana project must be made," he said. "Romania needs it, on condition that the terms relating the sharing of the benefits from the operation of the gold and silver reserves of Rosia Montana be renegotiated."

Romanian Prime Minister Emil Boc also has stated his preference to have the terms of the deal revisited, saying last week he's awaiting the results of an environmental impact assessment as well as legal opinions on its EU aspects.

"I am no fan of this project for various reasons," he told Radio Romania Actualitati Friday. "In my opinion, the benefits to the Romanian government are not yet sufficient within the project framework the government has negotiated with the entrepreneurs, and surely it should be revisited."

Meanwhile, Gabriel Chief Executive Jonathan Henry said he's encouraged Bucharest seems to be moving ahead with the project.

"I'm cautiously optimistic," he told The Globe and Mail. "If the Romanian government did not want this project, we'd know by now."




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Marchers resume road project protest in Bolivia
San Borja, Bolivia (AFP) Aug 31, 2011 - Hundreds of indigenous Bolivians from the country's low-lying Amazon basin inlands on Wednesday resumed a protest march against a road project through a nature preserve.

President Evo Morales' socialist government has insisted that the road must be built. He has called for dialogue on the terms and the impact on the environment and local communities.

But after efforts at starting a dialogue fell flat over the weekend, demonstrators decided to get back on the protest trail on Wednesday in Totaizal, a town near San Borja.

Their destination is the capital, La Paz, in the Andean highlands, where they expect to arrive in about two weeks.

Two weeks ago the marchers who number about 1,500, including women and some children, set out from Trinidad and had delayed their protest amid hopes for successful talks with the Morales government.

"Our stand is firm and irrevocable: we do not want the highway because it is going to do environmental damage," said protest leader Adolfo Chavez on Wednesday.

Work got under way in June on the 306-kilometer (190-mile) road that is to pass through the ecologically-fragile area, Isiboro Secure National Park and Indigenous Territory, home to over 50,000 native people of the Moxos, Yurakare and Chimanes tribes. Financing for the thoroughfare was provided primarily by Brazil.

Several communities, under the organization of the Confederation of Indigenous Peoples of Bolivia, have protested in recent weeks against the north-south road project linking Villa Tunari and the strategically located San Ignacio de Moxos.

Morales has strained already frayed ties with Washington by charging the US embassy has been in contact with protest leaders; the US embassy denied the allegation.

Communications Minister Ivan Canelas said three cabinet ministers had been sent to San Borja for talks with the demonstrators.

Bolivia is South America's only indigenous-majority nation, and Morales is its first indigenous president.





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China appeals WTO ruling on raw materials exports
Geneva (AFP) Aug 31, 2011
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