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Wednesday, August 29, 2007
Paul Driessen :: Townhall.com Columnist
Keeping Romania impoverished
by Paul Driessen
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For decades, Nazi and Communist regimes ruled Romania, kept her people impoverished and exploited her resources – tearing vast mineral wealth from her mountains, with little regard for worker safety, people’s health or the environment. When the Soviet Empire collapsed, Romania eagerly embraced a more hopeful future and embarked on a course to join the European Union.

Life has improved for many, especially in cities like Bucharest. But Romania remains one of the EU’s poorest nations, and valleys that once echoed with the shouts of workers and roar of heavy equipment are now silent. Over 300,000 miners are jobless. Their villages have descended into squalor, misery and despondency that have no historic parallel.

Rosia Montana is one such place. This Transylvanian town hosts a massive open-pit mine, enormous waste dumps and, beneath them, hundreds of tunnels. The legacy of 2000 years of mining – the most damaging of which occurred under Ceaucescu – they leach toxic chemicals into local streams that now are red-orange from cadmium and contain 110 times the EU’s legal limit of zinc, 64 times its iron limit, and three times the limit for arsenic, the most dangerous chemical on the US government’s toxic substances list.

Homes and buildings are crumbling, two-thirds of them lack indoor toilets and running water, and 70% of the workers are unemployed. Families survive on wild berries, subsistence farming in rocky, acidic soil, welfare, and often less than US$2 a day. Few own a car. Frigid winters are warmed only by wood stoves. Malnutrition and ill health are constant problems. The dentist serves as the area’s only doctor.

Unlike most former mining towns, however, Rosia has one last chance. Gabriel Resources wants to reopen the mine, to tease out nearly 2,000 tons of gold and silver that the antiquated methods of bygone eras could not extract.

In the process, the Canadian company would spend millions to erase the horrific environmental legacy, restore the land to forests, pastures and grasslands, and leave the alpine waters sparkling. All at no cost to the Romanian government, which cannot afford to clean up the mess itself.

Gabriel would also create high-paying jobs, revitalize the community, protect and restore Rosia’s most valuable churches and buildings in a special historic zone, build a modern village with homes in traditional Romanian styles, save Roman and other archeological treasures in a museum – and provide precious metals for jewelry, computers and other marvels. (The company has already spent over US$200 million; its US$10-million expenditure thus far on archeology is 40 times the Romanian Culture Ministry’s annual budget between 1990 and 2003.)

Over a 29-year period, the project would create 1,200 construction jobs, more than 600 mining jobs, and 6,000 indirect jobs in service sectors. It would inject US$2.5 billion into the local and Romanian economy, and leave Rosia Montana with a modern infrastructure: roads, electricity, internet, safe running water, a new school and clinic, and dozens of new businesses that will sustain a strong economy long after the mine is gone. Of course, other ore bodies might be discovered, prolonging the area’s mining economy for decades.

The museum, clean environment, and new hotels and restaurants will attract tourists who have never before had a reason to visit this cold, polluted, inhospitable region.

No wonder the mayor strongly supports the new mine and was re-elected with over 80% of the vote. If the project moves forward, miracles will happen. If it dies, the land and water will remain polluted, because Romania cannot afford to clean it up. More young people will leave, the elderly will be abandoned, and investors will think twice about coming to Romania.

But none of this matters to the international anti-mining movement. Almost the moment the plan was announced, foreign NGOs (non-governmental organizations) launched a local opposition group (Alburnus Maior) and well-financed campaign to stop the project – using techniques they had refined in countless actions across North and South America, Asia and Africa.

The region is idyllic, they say – perfect for farming and tourism. The people love their quaint homes and prefer horse-drawn carts over automobiles. Gabriel would uproot families, destroy Rosia’s churches and landmarks, and pollute the pristine environment. The people don’t want these temporary jobs. They’d rather pick mushrooms and carve wood figurines.

These and other absurd lies are chronicled in the documentary film "Mine Your Own Business." Residents can hardly imagine anyone would believe them. But websites, awards from celebrities and like-minded pressure groups, and a constant flow of spurious allegations have generated opposition all over Europe. A recent PBS television pseudo-documentary (funded by Greenpeace) is carrying their anti-mining battle to US audiences.

The latest fabrication attacks the proposed use of cyanide to recover the precious metals. The NGOs claim the method is dangerous and used only in destitute Third World countries. They have persuaded Romanian legislators to introduce laws banning the chemical – and thus scuttling the project and future mining prospects.

Actually, cyanide is produced by bacteria and fungi, and found in almonds, coffee and other foods. Over 400 modern mines in the US, EU, Canada, Australia and many other nations use it to extract gold and silver. Because it degrades quickly and naturally, and does not involve acids or heavy metals, it is safer for workers and the environment than alternative methods. Indeed, it is far less toxic than automobile exhaust or the arsenic and other chemicals that now foul Rosia Montana’s water.

Gabriel Resources – the only EU-licensed company to sign the International Cyanide Management Code – plans to use it in a state-of-the-art system that will safely recycle the chemical repeatedly and send nearly cyanide-free water into a lined waste facility. The system is designed so that even major storms will not release dangerous chemicals into the environment – a huge difference from the risky, antiquated system that caused the Baia Mare overflow.

The radical NGOs simply hate mining, don’t live in the village, have no compassion for these families, and are under no legal obligation to be honest, transparent or accountable for the consequences of their actions. As one foreign activist said in an email:

"Why should any NGO come forward with alternative projects? That is not the job of civil society. We are not a humanitarian organization, but a militant environmental NGO. If the whole community is in favor of the project, we simply put it on the list of our enemies."

They will spend millions to stop development, but not one cent on poor people or the environment. They destroy thousands of jobs, but create no new ones. When someone asked the Alburnus Maior president where his money comes from, he said "It’s not your business!"

George Soros and his Soros Foundation Romania appear to be the principal money behind this campaign. Not only is this support anti-poor, anti-environment and anti-Romania. It's also hypocritical, because Soros has made millions from mining operations that use cyanide – and a silver mine that relocated an entire village. But stopping Gabriel and other Western corporations could certainly benefit his political agenda and provide opportunities to profit from fluctuations in metals prices caused by restrictions on mining in the face of surging demand to meet the needs of new technologies and developing economies.

It also promotes Hungary's desire to assert influence over lands that once were part of its empire, or at least prevent those regions from becoming economic competitors. That desire may explain why its government issued a press release condemning the project, almost immediately after it had submitted 122 questions about the project, but before it had received a single answer.

Twenty-one Romanian NGOs visited Rosia Montana and met with the people and company. Eighteen of them changed their minds and now support the project. The radical activists refuse to have any dialogue.

Draped in gold, actress Vanessa Redgrave used a Cluj-Napoca film festival to proclaim her opposition to the mine. When the people of Rosia Montana wrote her a letter – asking "Where will be go? How will we live?" – she responded with stony, callous silence.

Wealthy San Francisco insurance magnate Richard Goldman gave Swiss-British Stephanie Roth US$125,000 for leading the project's opposition. He has also given nearly US$1-million to radical anti-insecticide groups that help perpetuate malaria, misery and childhood death in Africa.

But what possible reason can the Royal Society, Catholic Church, news media and Royal Family of Romania have for opposing this project? Why do they want to ensure that thousands of their own people remain unemployed, living in squalid homes and sentenced to suffer in one of Romania’s most polluted areas? Why do they want to give George Soros and Hungary veto power over Romania’s mining industry and thousands of jobs and families?

Would Princess Margareta or any of the journalists, Church leaders or Society elites want to live even one winter in this "paradise" they want to "save"? Do they hate mining with enough passion to give up its benefits: their fine homes, jewelry, computers, cars and jet travel – none of which are possible without mining? Will Redgrave, Roth, Soros, Goldman and other project opponents do likewise? Will the anti-cyanide legislators?

Rather than aligning with the foreign militants, Romanian legislators, journalists, celebrities and citizens should visit the village, strip mines, streams and waste heaps, and speak with the people of Rosia Montana and Gabriel Resources. If there is a need for legislation, it is for laws that compel anti-development NGOs – and those that bankroll them – to abide by basic rules for honesty, transparency and accountability that every decent organization should be happy to follow.

Most important, they should let the people of Rosia Montana decide their own future – without lies and pressure from foreign activists. If that future includes this mining project, it will give Rosia and the entire nation an opportunity to rehabilitate this ecological disaster, preserve the best of their cultural heritage, and become healthy, modern and prosperous. Together, these actions would help ensure that a half-century of oppression by totalitarians is not followed by oppression at the hands of unaccountable eco-imperialists.

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About The Author
Paul Driessen is senior policy adviser for the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow (CFACT), which is sponsoring the All Pain No Gain petition against global-warming hype. He also is a senior policy adviser to the Congress of Racial Equality and author of Eco-Imperialism: Green Power - Black Death.

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Greenpeace is disgusting
They don't care about people. All they care about is their agenda, and they don't have any desire to look at their agenda carefully to see the truth in it.

Are they just anti capitalism? Are they just evil people that want to hurt others as much as possible?

Or are they just plain stupid?

Shame
Shame Shame Shame. Nothing constructive just leave the mess that the socialists (communists) made. After all the peoples party could not have destroyed the environment. Oops, that is one of the things socialists (eco-environmentalists) do best!

It is regrettable
that Amrican and Canadian companies can not destroy the nature of former socialist countries at will. The attempts to nbenefit from more lax environmental protection laws is so blatant here. This column sounds more like paid advertisement for this company so I would like to ask how much money this company paid to mr. Driessen or his non-profit to make this column?

Few years ago huge quantities cyanide was dumped into Danube from similar gold mine and it destroyed fishing for years. So people in Romania have reasons to doubt all these wonderful promises of the mining company.

And isn't it just horroble that there actually is a civil society in Roumania, a society that has freedom of exporession, freedom of advocacy and freedom to create NGO's who dare to oppose the business interests of a mining company?

If the mining company can't make its case with Roumanian governemnt or people don't you come whining here. But then this column has an air of paid advertisment. I wonder how much monety was paid to Driessen or his organization for this lobbying effort?

To actually know what it's like.
I'm Romanian. I was born in the U.S. I went back a few monthes ago and spent 6 monthes of my life there. There people need help. Not only do they want it, but they are harming themselves by not being able to understand what's going on with their enviornment. The people who oppose this are the elderly. They are against any type of change (But imagine, these are the people that still feed chickens left over eggs. They belive women should still be wearing scarves to cover their hair. They have the insane idea that the United States controls the weather. Things I've heard first hand, been asked about countless times.) They need someone foreign to come and help them built their country. They don't have the money, the resources, or the knowledge. But you can ask people, and they will sing to you how they hope to see their country grow and modernize. Preserve history, I am 100% for it. But this country doesn't have 2 pennies to rub together once you get out of a select few larger cities. It's not uncommon to drive by and see people still washing themselves in the river and ridding around in a horse drawn cart on "freeways". I think anyone would agree after seeing the living conditions.

Well well
Isn't it interesting that kathy Sipos from Gabriel Resources just happened to be a guest speaker in Atlas Liberty congress organized by Driessen's agency only recently? What a curious coincidence... coud happen to anyone, really...

Yeah, sure. they have all the best of Roumanian people at heart...

So Tell us Van
I see you spreading all the typical Socialist, Anti Progress, Anti-Capitalist propaganda(LIES).
So tell us, what would you do to help these people? Continue to tell them that they're fine as they are and they don't need to improve their circumstances?
I'd really like to know how you would help them.

Van and
yet you factually refute non of Driessens numbers on what the company has pledged to do nor do you acknowledge the far superior treatment of the enviroment by western corporations compared to those of the former soviet block. If you're so concerned with the romanian people what would you do for them. Or is it that you would have them continue to bathe in the river and scratch out a meager living from the spoiled earth.

If
the Roumanians don't want the mine IT IS THEIR RIGHT to do so. If there are people, princesses or not and/or NGO's in Roumania who oppose the mine, it's a sign of a free sociity. In the good old days all Gabriel Resources needed to do was to bribe a governemnt official to get the mining permit. Now they need to convince the people. It's called democracy.

Whining here for compensation doesn't really change the situation much does it. So the true purpose of this column is not to alk about Roumania but to badmouth environmental groups for daring to oppose a multinational mining company's finacial interests. The question is not what I want but what they want in Roumania. if they do not want Canadians to pour cyanide in their rivers, they don't.

Maybe they are capable of solving this issue in Roumania. But isn't it bit thick from Dreissen to complain about "foreign" (read European) influence and then to lobby for the mine as American? Not to talk about being paid to do so.

Your argument is a lie
Van writes:
"If the Romanians don't want the mine IT IS THEIR RIGHT to do so. If there are people, princesses or not and/or NGO's in Roumania who oppose the mine, it's a sign of a free sociity. In the good old days all Gabriel Resources needed to do was to bribe a governemnt official to get the mining permit. Now they need to convince the people. It's called democracy."


The problem with your argument is that it's false. Ther may be SOME NATIVE people in Romania(there's no U in Romania) who don't want the mines, but the majority pf those who don't are NOT Romanians.
They are International busybodies like AMERICAN Actress Vanessa Redgrave, AMERICAN Businessman Richard Goldman, International ANTI CAPITALIST George Soros, GREENPEACE, and a lot of others.
As is always the case, NOT ONE of these people has a better idea to help the native Romanians, all they're interested in is stopping the mine.

Well here's a thought for you, VAN. As you said it's THEIR, the people of Romanias, business. It's none of YOUR Business, it's none of Greenpeaces' business, it's none of Vanessa Redgraves, or Richard Goldmans' or George Soros' business if they want to build and work the mine.

So stop your lies about being concerned for the people of Romania. You're not and it's blatantly obvious. All you're concerned about is keeping these people from making their lives better because YOU don't like how they're trying to do it.


What's the answer, Van
OK, Van, how do you fix the problem? After all you're either part of the problem, part of the solution, or part of the landscape.

I too have seen it
I traveled the back roads of Transylvannia and saw the people loaded on broken carriages pulled by mules, piles of garbage beside houses to serve as insulation, and subsistence like we cannot imagine since days when this country US was being settled. It is very different and more tragic in ways then seeing a favela in Brazil or a slum in Mexico city.

To Romanian Becky
Ce Faci...wow a multi lingual

We have no right to say anything
These Marxists--for what are environmentalists but Marxists in other guise--know much better than we do what is best for everyone.

Don't the impoverished villagers know that they are not truly impoverished, but rather, rich in their quaint cultural heritage?

Don't they know that having indoor plumbing supports an evil industry of plumbers, whose very name comes from the Latin word for lead, and lead itself is evil?

Don't they know how fortunate they are to have horse- or mule-drawn carts, instead of evil autos, that pollute our Mother Earth Gaia with their filth, while horses and mules produce methane, which is good?

Don't they know how noble they are, because they don't have possessions to distract them from the noble contemplation of worthy things, like gay marriage, gun control and abortion on demand?

Please, George Soros, come to Bethlehem and tell me how to run my life, too. I'm just a dumb conservative, what do I know, I need the bigger brains of Marxists to tell me what to do.

(Where's John Brown when we really need him?)

Hillary delenda est.

Nothing but the truth, the whole truth..
Van posts vicious posts. Now he is an expert on Romania?

We have ag projects in Romania at the present time. Our college son spent his summer there. Good things are happening in this country - under the radar, perhaps- but positive, nonetheless.

In the few years that we have been consulting and farming in this country, we have seen the govt step up to the plate to repair damage done by the late Romanian dictator and wife.

In traveling from one end of the country to the other, we continue to see economic growth. It is now part of the EU and will return as the bread basket of Europe with its wonderful soil and water.

Our past experience with Greenpeace in Georgia (Russia) is that they can be a hired gun and very dishonest. Watch out for such organizations and follow the money.

Stay tuned as this great country continues to get back on its feet.

What do the opponents propose...?
--
...as measures of equal potency for success in helping the people of Rosia Montana achieve levels of living standards and environmental improvements equivalent or superior to what Gabrial Resources has promised?

Clearly, the people of this region can't prosper - or even survive, in some cases - if things stand as they are.

It's not enough for the "Progressives" simply to block progress without offering reasonable alternatives of better quality.

We have only part of the story here, I think. Has anyone any sort of information on what the naysayers are offering?

--

To Conservativation From Becky
bun, si tu? You're random.
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