A court has
blocked the Brazilian assets of mining giants Vale and BHP Billiton to ensure
they pay for damage of a deadly toxic discharge that buried villages. The spill
caused Brazil's worst environmental disaster.
Deutsche Welle, 20 December 2015
A judge in
Brazil's state of Minas Gerais ruled late Friday that the Brazilian assets of
mining giants BHP Billiton and Vale SA be frozen after their joint venture
Samarco was unable to pay for damage caused by the bursting of a dam at its
iron ore mining operation.
"In 30
days, the companies should make an initial deposit of 2 billion reais ($502
million, 462 million euros) to carry out the full recovery plan," the
judge ruled. Vale and BHP Billiton will be fined $37,000 a day if they fail to
comply.
The dam
burst last November - considered Brazil's worst ever ecological disaster -
killed more than a dozen people, left hundreds homeless and polluted a
800-kilometers (500-miles) stretch of the Doce River across two states and into
the Atlantic Ocean.
Environment
Minister Izabella Teixeira said it will take at least 10 years for the river
basin to recover from the extensive mining waste that's permeated the
watershed.
But despite
the scale of the disaster, multinational mining giant Vale had argued its
Samarco venture is an independent legal entity and wholly responsible for
liability and cleanup.
Federal
Judge Marcelo Aguiar Machado disagreed in his 19-page judgment: "I
understand to be correct the allegation that Vale and BHP, as controllers of
Samarco, can be classified as indirect polluters and as such responsible for
the environmental damage caused."
Prosecutors
plan to sue Vale and BHP Billiton for $5.2 billion for cleanup costs and
damages relating to the disaster.
Farmers'
livelihoods destroyed
A BHP
spokesman said in a statement Sunday that it could not comment on the ruling as
the mine company had yet to receive formal notification of the decision but
made assurances it would assist with the cleanup.
"We
are committed to supporting Samarco to rebuild the community and restore the
environment affected by the breach of Samarco's Fundao and Santarem tailings
dams, in the state of Minas Gerais," a company spokesman said.
The Australian
company's share price has fallen more than 40 percent on the Australian
Securities Exchange this year.
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