“They will die by the
thousands,” he said. Jakarta hopes that a landmark UN convention,
signed this week in Japan aimed at reining in the use of mercury, will
limit supplies of the metal for miners in Indonesia and help reduce the
deadly practice. But others believe the treaty, signed near Minamata in
southwest Japan where mercury pollution poisoned tens of thousands, is
too weak to tackle a problem that has grown in tandem with the price of
gold. The United Nations estimates that up to 15 million so-called
“artisanal small-scale gold miners” operate in 70 countries. In
Indonesia, the numbers have risen from an estimated 50,000 in 2006 to
around 500,000, according to Abdul Harris, who heads a government-backed
task force charged with tackling the issue. The widespread use of
mercury to extract gold has made mining the biggest single source of
man-made releases of the highly toxic metal into the environment,
according to the UN.
http://main.omanobserver.om/?p=22618
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