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Newmont Exec Sues New York Times Over Indonesia Stories

Newmont's Richard Ness. Photo courtesy AFP.
by Staff Writers
Jakarta (AFP) May 15, 2007
An executive from US mining giant Newmont sued the New York Times for more than 64 million dollars Tuesday over claims the firm dumped toxic waste into an Indonesian bay. Richard Ness said he sued the newspaper and one of its reporters for defamation in an Indonesian court over stories published in 2004 that claimed Newmont polluted the bay with tonnes of waste from its now defunct gold mine.

The suit comes less than a month after Ness and the local unit of Newmont were cleared by Indonesian judges of criminal charges that they polluted Buyat Bay with arsenic and mercury from the mine.

"The New York Times claimed that we killed fish and poisoned people and I think the court's ruling last month proved that we didn't," Ness told AFP.

"I want to see an apology on page one of the newspaper that clears my name and our image," he said.

Prosecutors had wanted to jail Ness for three years for the alleged pollution on Indonesia's Sulawesi island in a drawn-out case closely watched by foreign investors and environmentalists.

Ness claimed that the stories were inaccurate, unfair and had contributed to the charges being brought against him and Newmont.

He said the allegations and subsequent court case had taken their toll on his personal life but he needed to continue fighting to clear his name.

Ness said he was seeking about 64 million dollars in immaterial damages and another 894,000 dollars in material damages.

A Newmont spokesman said Ness was acting alone, not on behalf of the company.

"This lawsuit is being made by Rick Ness rather than the company because he feels the newspaper did not investigate the claims properly," spokesman Rubi Purnomo told AFP.

"He is seeking a public apology from the newspaper to himself and to the Indonesian government, which he feels has been misled," he said.

There was no immediate comment from the newspaper.

The stories, written by reporter Jane Perlez, brought international attention to Buyat Bay and were published around the time that police started to investigate complaints of pollution from villagers living near the bay.

The villagers said pollution was killing marine life and making them ill, and complained of headaches, skin rashes and tumours.

Prosecutors, backed by the Indonesian government, subsequently laid charges against Newmont and Ness in August 2005.

Newmont had always denied the charges, saying it disposed of toxins safely and that levels of mercury and arsenic were within acceptable levels.

Studies of waters around the bay have shown conflicting results. A World Health Organisation-backed report and others found no evidence of pollution, but government tests showed high levels of toxins.

An official at the district court in central Jakarta confirmed the case had been lodged Tuesday.

Ness posted an entry earlier Tuesday on his son's website blog that read: "Over the past two and a half years we have been reacting and responding to the unfair accusations leveled against us but it may now be our turn to take some action."

Source: Agence France-Presse

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Zambia Closes Chinese-Run Mine Over Air Pollution
Lusaka (AFP) May 14, 2007
Zambia has shut down a Chinese-run mine because its contribution to air pollution which threatens the health of hundreds of residents of nearby townships, an official told AFP Monday. Chiman Manufacturing Limited, which mines Manganese, was indefinitely closed on Friday for failing to put in place air pollution control mechanisms, said Justin Mukosa, spokesman of the Environmental Council of Zambia (ECZ), a statutory regulator.







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