CRG looks to the Ali administration to ban the use of mercury in the gold mining industry

Dear Editor,

There was a recent documentary on Channel News Asia, based in Singapore that covered the serious dangers of using mercury in gold mining. It was very saddening to see how the smaller gold miners and their families were seriously affected by this highly toxic metal. The recent tragedy at the GGMC and the concerns uncovered with mercury being in the blood of scores of our workers should have been a wake-up call for all of us that we must find another way to safely extract the gold needed to support the development of the economy. It is said that the mercury eventually enters the food

production cycle and does not break down in the environment, but instead enters the water cycle when it is burned and becomes a gas.

It is therefore extremely important that we move towards banning its use in the gold mining industry. There are many healthier alternatives from panning to magnets that can be implemented to effectively protect miners and extract the gold. The safety of our citizens must remain the top priority for our Nation. Our Amerindian brothers and sisters are at the highest risk of being exposed to the harmful effects of this poison being used to mine the land for gold. The country is already being enriched by the extraction of oil, and we should not become greedy to the detriment of ourselves and our people. The pace of gold extraction should be in sync with the safe methods of mining. There is no longer an urgent economic gap that needs to be filled by the sale of gold.

The country can also afford to provide a monetary incentive to miners to ensure that they do not suffer any economic hardships due to the transition to safer mining practices, which will allow them to safeguard their and their families’ health while earning an honest living in a safe environment. CRG looks forward to the current Ali Administration implementing the necessary regulations and reforms in the gold mining industry that will ban the use of mercury in the industry, improve the required safe work practices, and provide the financial package and or jobs needed for the miners to not suffer any economic setbacks as we transition to a safer gold mining industry.

Sincerely,

Jamil Changlee

Chairman

The Cooperative Republicans of

Guyana