Features
THE RETURN OF BLACK MESA
Restoring Natural and Cultural Resources in Navajo Country
by Sam Koplinka-Loehr, Waging Nonviolence
As the Arizona sun crests the ridge of Big Mountain, it casts a deep red hue on Peabody Energy's Black Mesa coal mine. Less than a hundred yards away, in the shadow of the towering coal processing plant, the Benally family gets ready for a day of school, work and sheepherding.
Black Mesa Mine is one of two coal mines located in the middle of the Navajo Nation in northeastern Arizona—the other is Kayenta Mine, just five miles down the road. Both mines opened in the late 1960s, but the Benally family has lived there for generations.
Norman Benally has been a community activist almost his entire life and remembers herding sheep on this land before Peabody arrived.
"I've seen the landscape change, literally," he said.
POLICE IN THE PAY OF MINING COMPANIES
A Corporate Mineral-Security Complex in Peru
by Luis Manuel Claps, NACLA
Peru is a mining conflict country. In September of this year, the Defensoría del Pueblo (National Ombudsman Office) reported 223 social conflicts in September alone, with more than two thirds of them linked to minerals. The report also registers 196 dead and 2,369 injured in disputes over natural resources from 2006 to 2011. The database of the Latin American Observatory of Mining Conflicts (OCMAL) registers 34 cases across Peru. Even though the State has increased its presence in some mining areas and has its own Social Conflict Administration Office, the front line often becomes the ugliest side of corporate-community relations.
SYRIA: GENOCIDE BY INTERNATIONAL CONSENSUS
by Amr Salahi, Middle East Monitor
Ever since the Syrian regime gassed its own citizens in the Damascus suburbs in a chemical attack on August 21, the issue has rarely been out of the Western news media. However, the debate has been very simplistic. Any observer would be forgiven for thinking that the only crime committed in Syria was this chemical attack, and that the Syrian people had not been subjected to a genocidal war at the hands of a ruthless sectarian dictatorship for two and a half years.
THE VEIL: FLAG OF THE MUSLIM FAR RIGHT
An Interview with Marieme Helie Lucas
by Maryam Namazie, Fitnah
NAGASAKI CALL FOR NUCLEAR ABOLITION
by Ramesh Jaura, IDN
NAGASAKI — More than 50,000 nuclear weapons have been eliminated since the historic Reykjavík Summit between the then-US President Ronald Reagan and his counterpart from the erstwhile Soviet Union Mikhail Gorbachev, which culminated in the groundbreaking Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF) in December 1987. But 17,300 nukes remain, threatening many times over the very survival of human civilization and most life on earth, as the 2013 Nagasaki Appeal points out.
COP 19: TRUE CRIME
by Michael I. Niman, ArtVoice
This is crime at a level never before seen in human history. Star culprits include Chevron Texaco, Exxon/Mobil, and BP. Co-conspirators include your daily newspaper and evening news broadcasts. Hundreds of millions of people have shared the bounty of this ongoing depravity. Billions are now at risk of losing their homes, their livelihoods, and even their lives.
The latest chapter of this saga took place in Warsaw earlier this month at the "COP 19" global governmental meeting on climate change. The big news, and this is news, is that once again, nothing of substance happened.
MORE MARKET, MORE DICTATORSHIP
China's Third Plenum Signals New 'Paramount Leader'
from chinaworker.info
"More market, less freedom, and much more power to Xi Jinping"—this was the verdict of Beijing-based journalist Ola Wong, on the decisions of the recently concluded third plenary meeting of the CCP's 18th Central Committee. Third Plenum meetings have a special status in China's authoritarian system, because of the key 1978 meeting (11th Central Committee's Third Plenum), which sealed the triumph of Deng Xiaoping over Mao Zedong's designated heir Hua Guofeng and launched the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) onto the path of pro-capitalist "reform and opening." Expectations among the capitalists in China and globally have accordingly been high.
URANIUM MINING AND NATIVE RESISTANCE
For the Uranium Exploration and Mining Accountability Act
by Curtis Kline, Intercontinental Cry
Native Americans in the northern Great Plains have the highest cancer rates in the United States, particularly lung cancer. It's a problem that the United States government has woefully ignored, much the horror of the men and women who must carry the painful, life-threatening burden. The cancer rates started increasing drastically a few decades after uranium mining began on their territory.
According to a report by Earthworks (PDF), "Mining not only exposes uranium to the atmosphere, where it becomes reactive, but releases other radioactive elements such as thorium and radium and toxic heavy metals including arsenic, selenium, mercury and cadmium. Exposure to these radioactive elements can cause lung cancer, skin cancer, bone cancer, leukemia, kidney damage and birth defects."
Today, in the northern great plains states of Wyoming, Montana and the Dakotas, the memory of that uranium mining exists in the form of 2,885 abandoned open pit uranium mines. All of the abandoned mines can be found on land that is supposed to be for the absolute use of the Great Sioux Nation under the 1868 Fort Laramie Treaty with the United States.
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