Where are you involved-- Henry Kissinger, J Stapleton Roy, Dan Kurtzer? Radioactive dumping scandal in Africa.

by humanrightswatcher | December 15, 2007 at 06:41 am
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This is  a subject where the  NY Times, Washington Post, Associated Press, International Herald Tribune reporting can  be a part of a solution when it comes to Africa. African countries are certainly not in charge of their own safety and destiny. Pollitical and business lobbies keep the continent in disarray for their own material benefits.


Unless we look behind the companies to the people who are responsible for political and human consequences of countries, looking at the after effects amounts to being an inadequate band aid remedy. Check out this story about 6 arested in The Congo for illegal radioactive dumping. http://www.reuters.com/article/homepageCrisis/idUSL09535878._CH_.2400


One day before this  above scandal  ( available via the link) comes out:
http://www.marketwire.com/mw/release.do?id=800407
announcement of Katanga Mining taking over Nikanor.


These two  mining companies comprise two of the three companies under investigation for illegal dumping of radioactive matter into a river. Board members of involved companies include Dan Kurtzer former US Ambassador to Israel and Egypt  and  former Ambassador to China and Singapore J Stapleton Roy. ( he works for KISSINGER assocates.. now do you think they are hired because of their geology interests?) While children, animals and adults  are running for their lives  in Africa, people behind companies are creating the dangerous and deadly circumstance so that DR  Congo's resources are still carted away for profit. There is undoubtedly a coverup going on to this spill. Strife seems to camoflage that.


 Again, people need to get to the root of power to understand how to create remedies.  Only when those who pull the strings are truly  known and accountable will responsibility prevail. People focus too much on putting out the fires rather than figuring out who and what entities are involved in  creating and supporting  the  dangerous and deadly problems.


Here is the pasted original story:

Six arrested in Congo radioactive dumping scandal
09 Nov 2007 13:25:43 GMT09 Nov 2007 13:25:43 GMT ## for search indexer, do not remove-->
Source: Reuters

 

KINSHASA, Nov 9 (Reuters) - Congolese authorities arrested six people in connection with the dumping of tonnes of highly radioactive minerals into a river near the southeastern town of Likasi, the environment minister said on Friday.

 

A quarantine zone was also set up around the site, just 10 km (6 miles) from the mining town of 300,000 people, where tests on Thursday revealed radiation levels nearly 50 times the limit for mineral exports from Democratic Republic of Congo.

 

Congo launched an inquiry on Wednesday after officials in the southeastern province of Katanga said radioactive copper and cobalt ore appeared to have been dumped into the Mura river, a source of drinking water for Likasi.

 

Authorities in Likasi had seized nearly 19 tonnes of radioactive minerals due for export in October and ordered their disposal at a nearby abandoned uranium mine last week.

 

The load never made it to the mine and the government says at least some of the ore was dropped from a bridge into the river.

 

"The entire commission charged with disposing of these minerals is now under arrest. There are six people now in custody, and I expect a seventh to be arrested today," Environment Minister Didace Pembe told Reuters on Friday.

 

Pembe, who headed a team of experts from the Environment Ministry and Congo's Atomic Energy Agency who visited the site on Thursday, said he was due to report his findings to Prime Minister Antoine Gizenga on Friday.

 

The extent of the river's contamination would be made public over the weekend, he said. Congo's national copper mining company, Gecamines, had already been asked to begin a cleanup of the dumping site.

 

"The damage is enormous," Pembe said. "We've asked the population not to use the water from the river for consumption by either people or animals."

 

Though the team of experts had confirmed some radioactive minerals had been dumped, the minister said he did not believe all 19 tonnes were in the Mura.

 

"Nineteen tonnes would be a small mountain. We did not see that. All of the minerals were not dumped. That is sure."

 

Police in Katanga were trying to locate the truck used in the dumping on Friday and Pembe said efforts were under way to trace the missing minerals.

 

According to a report by Likasi's mayor's office, some 17 tonnes of the minerals seized because of their extreme radioactivity were destined for Chinese firm Magma.

 

Inspectors confiscated smaller amounts from Congolese company Chemaf and a mineral broker based in Katanga's capital, Lubumbashi. Executives at Magma and Chemaf could not be reached for comment.

 

Ore mined in Katanga, home to one of the world's richest belts of copper and cobalt, habitually contains trace amounts of uranium, which Congo is currently banned from exporting.

 

Congolese officials said the dumped materials were believed to come from the nearby Kolwezi area, home to projects by several foreign mining groups including Katanga Mining, Nikanor and Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold. (Editing by Daniel Flynn and Mary Gabriel)

 

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humanrightswatcher

THESE GUYS in charge of the natural resources and shaping political policy in Congo?!!


 


http://www.minesandcommunities.org/Action/press1499.htm


Saved in the time of Nik?


by London Calling


19th May 2007


Little noticed by even the keenest London market watchers over recent months has been the extraordinary rise of Nikanor, an AIM-registered mining company which claims to possess the largest bunch of mineral prospects in Africa's most "prospective" but conflict-ridden state, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).


Last year, those of us who knew something of the key players in Nikanor - Barry Steinmetz, the Israeli diamond king, the Gertner family and Dan Gertler (not to be confused with the Gertner's) - became considerably alarmed at their direct participation in this new UK company which was accepted for a London listing at almost lightning speed.


It wasn't so much that the prospective ventures could create unprecedented environmental messes (no more so than other "rehabilitated" mines in the former Zaire). Rather, it was that these men were highly untrustworthy, secretive and proven rank speculators, whose aim was obviously to usurp DRC's mineral wealth and subvert anything approaching democratic control over its citizens' resources.


Last week, shareholders - including the minority in Nikanor who don’t necessarily follow the two G's and the S - voted at the company's annual general meeting against a buy-out offer for the company in the form of a "special purpose vehicle", dubbed "Cosaf Limited". This comprises two entities wholly owned by RP Capital Partners Cayman Islands Limited, and Glencore International AG, along with Nikanor's three existing major shareholders who hold some 72% of Nikanor. (Steinmetz: 36%; the Gertner family 20%; Dan Gertler 16%. )


However, as an illuminating article from Mineweb pointed out last week, it’s far from clear which of these existing or putative partners are actually in play, or what they're playing at.


Certainly Nikanor needs loads-a-money: its revised capital expenditure estimates have increased since the company's London listing last year - by $335m to $1.6bn. And it should be no surprise that Glencore - the world's most ruthless and profitable private trading company - may be waiting in the wings to pounce on stage when the time is right. Glencore's partner, RP Capital, is yet another of those shady Hedge Funds which have been creaming profits from so-called "long-short" share deals; as happened during Xstrata 's 2006 takeover of Canada's mining company, Falconbridge. (And Glencore, of course, along with Credit Suisse, is the biggest shareholder in Xstrata.)


Mineweb's Barry Sergeant comments : "[I]t's likely to become increasingly clear that Cosaf's putative offer is contrived, and aimed almost solely at the non-dilution of stakes held by Nikanor's founding shareholders."


That may be. But it's also possible that Glencore will end up controlling Nikanor. Nor should we be tempted to cast Nikanor's minority directors as innocents going unwillingly to the slaughter. Among them is:


* Jonathan Leslie , who worked 26 years for Rio Tinto, and headed its copper division when the UK company cranked up production at the notorious Grasberg mine in West Papua, resulting in a devastating 200,000 tonnes a day of wastes cascading into the Ajkwa river system.


* The Rt Hon Earl of Balfour, who's a director of a subsidiary of the Rothschild international investment bank.


* Peter Sydney-Smith, who was former finance director of Vedanta Resources plc until his sudden resignation in mid-2005.


*Dan Kurtzer, US ambassador to Israel until September 2005, and:


* Terry Robinson, a non-executive director of steel-maker Evraz (biggest shareholder: Roman Abramovich) which was responsible for the worst-ever recorded coal mine "accident" in Russia last year.


As the saying goes: with friends like these...



Source: “Nikanor directors in civil war Private equity-type buyout, needing close to $2bn, would force delisting from the LSE.” By Barry Sergeant, Mineweb 16 May 2007


[London Calling is published by Nostromo Research, London. The views expressed do not necessarily represent those of the MAC editorial board, or any non-quoted source. Reproduction is welcome, provided full attribution is made to the author.]


 

Jordan Yerman
Jordan Yerman
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 11:47 on December 15th, 2007

humanrightswatcher, thanks for posting this... "follow the money" is always a great game for the politically- and socially-minded. ALso, we have a tool called Highlight which makes block-quoting even easier.

0
humanrightswatcher

I appreciate your help and thoughts! I agree about FOLLOW THE MONEY. People don't pay enough attention to that.. and figuring out the origins of issues in order to get somewhere in clearing things up.


We hope to make a difference.

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