Thousands of Workers Protest Gold Mine in Athens

13th March 2013

13th March 2013

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Thousands of protesters marched in central Athens against a disputable gold mining project in northern Greece which they say is ruining the natural environment in the region and brings zero profits to the cash-strapped country.

“We want the land, the water and the trees, not a golden tomb”, chanted thousands of Greeks, marching in support of the local community in the Skouries region of Chalkidiki, in northern Greece.

[EF! News Note: This gold mine project was also the recipient of an ambitious eco-arson attack last month]

The environmental impact of gold mining in the 317 thousand sq. km region is severe, say the protesters. There is almost a gram of gold in every ton of soil in the area. Hundreds of thousands of tons of earth will have to be dug out, cutting through a protected natural forest, then chemically processed using arsenic, cadmium and other toxic chemicals.

These will irreversibly damage local agriculture and fishing and pose a grave health risk for the entire region, as a gigantic cloud of dust looms over it and toxic damps are built to house the processed soil.

We spoke to activist and mathematics professor Antonis Vardoulakis, from the Aristotelian University in Thessaloniki, Greece’s second largest city, only 100 km from the region in question.

Ninety-five percent of the gold mine in Skouries belongs to Canadian multinational company Eldorado Gold and five percent to Hellas Gold, a private company owned by Fotis and George Bobolas, Greece’s construction tycoons and media moguls.

Astoundingly, the Greek State owns zero percent royalties in the gold mines in Skouries and another three regional gold and silver mines. Futhermore, in 2011, the Greek government was the intermediary for the transfer of ownership between the current and former owner companies, for a mere 11 million euros.

The gold mining project in Northern Greece is fast becoming one of the most controversial stories in the crisis-stricken country. Apart from the environmental hazard, there is no apparent evidence the gold mines will bring financial prosperity in the regional community, or increase cash-flow into the state coffers.

Check out news from an arson attack on the Skouries gold mine last month