Witnesses say
Indonesian police shot dead two protesters at point blank range as they
fled a fusillade of bullets as authorities broke up a blockade against
gold exploration activities undertaken by an Australian-owned mining
company.
This source:http://www.canberratimes.com.au/news/
Sydney-based Arc Exploration announced yesterday it had
stopped its exploration work at the concession on the Indonesian island
of Sumbawa amid an investigation by the country's human rights watchdog
to ascertain, among other things, whether the company had paid the
police.
A spokesman for the company said no payments or other
benefits had been given to police ''to my knowledge'' and that Arc
Exploration held all the permits necessary for its work.
According
to a detailed account of the incident by the Indonesian
environmentalist group Walhi, about 700 police attacked 350 protesters
''without any prior warning shots'' at Sape port near Bima on Christmas
Eve.
''The civilians then ran [and] scattered without fighting.
The running civilians were still being shot at,'' according to Walhi's
account, which it said was based on witness testimony.
Arief
Rahman, a local farmer was killed. So, too, was his cousin Saeful, who
was carrying the wounded Mr Arief when he was felled. Wahli and its
campaign manager, Teguh Surya, said the grievances of locals came
because ''it is well known gold mining will leave behind a toxic lake, a
big hole in the ground and the land will then be unusable,'' he said.
In
addition, Mr Teguh said, a spring used by nearby farmers would be
contaminated once the actual mining began. ''The farmers would prefer
that the land remained productive for their future,'' he said.
The Australian Greens have called on the Federal Government to investigate the activities of Arc.
Greens acting leader Christine Milne said there were ''legitimate questions'' for the company to answer.
Senator Milne drew links between Arc and two other companies - Newcrest Mining and Freeport.
The
senator said Arc employed John Carlile as managing director because of
his experience with Newcrest Mining operating in Indonesia. She said
Newcrest admitted in 2004 it had paid Indonesian security forces to
manage its site in Indonesia.
She also said an Arc board member
was from Freeport, operator of a controversial mine in West Papua that
had a similar relationship with the security forces there. with AAP
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