Gold,
Molotov Cocktails, Rubber Bullets, And Teargas: A Rift In Greece
11
October, 2012
A
Greek economist’s terse
sarcasm:
“GDP has decreased by €47 billion in the last five years. Economy
is expected to contract by 3.8% in 2013, the 6th straight year of
recession! Unemployment has reached 24.7%. Youth unemployment...
55.4%! No worries though—we have the sun, the sea, our cultural
background.”
And they have something else: GOLD.
Last
year, the Canadian company Eldorado Gold Corp. shelled out $2.4
billion to acquire European Goldfields, which had been struggling for
years to develop its Skouries and Olympias gold mines in Greece.
Eldorado also owns the Perama Hill project. The three mines are
expected to produce 345,000 ounces a year. The Australian company
Glory Resources Ltd. is developing its Sapes mine with an expected
production of 80,000 ounces a year. The four mines together would
produce 425,000 ounces of gold by 2016, or about $750 million at
today’s price—making Greece the largest
gold producer in
Europe.
Alas,
development has been blocked for a decade by bureaucratic
impossibilities, environmental groups, leftist political parties, and
local residents—despite the manna of tax revenues, royalties, and
jobs. Well, 1,700 jobs for 1.17 million unemployed.
But
they’re just scratching the surface, so to speak. “We think
Greece has the potential to be a major gold producer,” said Glory
Chairman Jeremy Wrathall. He found it “bizarre” that the country
was “virtually unexplored,” and he was full of hope that it had
“woken up to the potential of the mining industry.”
Eduardo
Moure, Eldorado’s general manager for Greece, had similar visions.
“I think people realize we are part of the solution,” he said,
convinced that they would “come to realize that mining can be a
positive force for change.”
Operations
are most advanced at Eldorado’s Olympias and Skouries mines in
Halkidiki, a peninsula in Northern Greece marked by its three
“fingers”—including Athos, whose Mount Athos is a world
heritage site. Tourism is by far the largest industry and employer.
And in July 2011, the Environment Ministry awarded the licenses to
mine gold.
Tensions
flared up in late March when protesters occupied the road leading to
the Skouries quarry on Mount Kakkavos and scuffled with workers who
were trying to get through. Then, in the nearby village of Ierissos,
a municipal council meeting that had convened to discuss the project
was broken up by protesters who overturned cars andfought
street battles with
riot police that had been brought in to keep things under control. A
member of the protesting committee later told the paper Kathimerini,
“A complete cessation of mining is the only action we are prepared
to accept from the state.”
Local
residence associations, cooperatives, and professional groups filed
six appeals with the Council of State, Greece’s highest court, to
stop further mining activity, arguing that it would destroy local
forests and the ecosystem. On July 24, the courtthrew
out the
first appeal on the grounds that the investment would be “very
beneficial for the economy.”
On
August 6, riot police that had once again been brought in
fired rubber
bullets and
teargas at protesters who marched from the village of Ierissos
towards the Skouries mine, where workers had begun chopping down
trees. On September 9, events took anasty
turn when
protesters—some local, some bused in from Thessaloniki—tried to
reach the mine. Police fired teargas. Protestors threw flares and
Molotov cocktails. A number of fires broke out. People were injured.
Police arrested several protestors and confiscated more than 50
firebombs.
The
issue has split the community in two. Both sides brandish reports in
support of their points of view. There are those who fear that mining
will degrade the environment, ruin tourism and their livelihood, and
leave behind, after the gold is depleted, untold damage. They’re
worried that sodium cyanide will be used to extract the gold from the
ore, which could contaminate the drinking water and the air. They’re
backed by the left-wing SYRIZA, the Alternative Ecologists, the Green
Ecologists, and other leftist groups.
And
there are those, including many local minors, who see the economic
benefits of the mines and believe that the environmental concerns are
overblown. They say that new technologies won’t require cyanide to
extract the gold. And Eldorado continues to emphasize that it adheres
to all environmental and other regulations.
The
whole debacle has laid bare one of the fundamental problems of
Greece: utter lack of trust in its institutions. Nick
Malkoutzis lamented
“the murky way that public sector contracts have been handed out
and the impunity enjoyed by companies that have violated all kinds of
regulations. While the wealth and influence of this minority has
grown, people’s confidence has withered.” And now, “every
scheme tendered by the government” is greeted “with suspicion.”
He called it “a social affliction brought on by years of graft.”
So,
when an acquaintance of mine in Greece had dinner with an official at
the Bank of Greece, the discussion inevitably came around to the
Troika—and how Greece should send them packing. “Of course,”
the central banker said, “it would help considerably if we actually
had a functioning government these past 182 years.” Read....
Merkel
Hides Behind The Troika Report, The Greeks Seethe, And The Drachma
Beckons.
And
here is SILVER: In July, Japan decided that utilities would be paid
three times more for electricity from solar sources than from
conventional sources. That premium will ignite the installation of
solar panels—which use a lot of silver! Read.... The
Solar Silver Thrust.

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