Yahoo – AFP,
Eugenia Logiuratto, 3 March 2016
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A fireman
rescues a dog that was trapped in the mud that swept through Bento
Rodrigues,
in Minas Gerais, Brazil on November 9, 2015 (AFP Photo/Douglas Magno)
|
Brasília
(AFP) - The owners of an iron ore mine in Brazil where a burst dam spewed a
toxic flood, flattening a village and killing 19 people, settled with the
government Wednesday for $6.2 billion.
Representatives
of Samarco -- co-owned by Brazil's Vale iron ore giant and the Anglo-Australian
BHP Billiton, the world's biggest mining company -- signed the accord in the
capital Brasilia.
President
Dilma Rousseff said the settlement would help heal "a tragedy without
precedent."
The funds,
which will go toward social and environmental damages, will be paid out over 15
years.
Twenty
billion reais ($5.1 billion) is earmarked for damages and an extra 4.4 billion
reais ($1.1 billion) is specifically allocated for investments aimed at
providing compensation for irredeemable losses.
Rousseff
underlined that the heavy financial costs for Samarco might not end there.
"There
will be complete restoration of socio-economic conditions and of the affected
environment. And I want to emphasize: There will be no financial limits until
there is full reparation," she said.
"We
want to build a new life on the ruins."
Destruction and 'homicide'
The
November 5 accident near Mariana in Minas Gerais state began when a tailings
dam at Samarco's mine failed, unleashing the flood of polluted water and mud
into the River Doce, one of the most important in Brazil.
A village
was destroyed, drinking water supplies for hundreds of thousands of people were
interrupted and damage reached as far as the river's mouth on the Atlantic
coast, with wildlife, tourism businesses and fishing communities all suffering.
Seventeen
people were confirmed killed and two are missing, presumed dead.
BHP
Billiton CEO Andrew Mackenzie called the agreement an important step toward
recovery and said his company was making a "commitment to repairing the
damage caused and to contributing to a lasting improvement in the Rio
Doce."
Paulo
Hartung, governor of Espirito Santo state, which also straddles the River Doce,
said the toxic flood marked "the biggest environmental disaster in the
history of Brazil."
Last month,
police announced homicide charges against six Samarco executives, including the
CEO at the time of the accident, and an engineer.
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A general
view on November 6, 2015 of the village of Bento Rodrigues, in Mariana,
Brazil
where a dam burst at a mining waste site (AFP Photo/Douglas Magno)
|
Samarco and
its powerful owners could still face further legal difficulties, despite
Wednesday's deal.
Last week,
a federal prosecutor said that he would challenge the settlement, arguing that
not enough care was taken in assessing the true costs of the disaster.
"How
can you define an amount if there are no criteria for evaluating the
damage?" Jose Adercio Leite Sampaio said. "Where did they get this
number? For us, it's a magic number... It could be 23 or 24, 30, 40
billion."
Vale
reported last week that it lost $12.3 billion last year due to lower prices for
iron ore, the sharp depreciation of the real, and the deadly accident at the
Samarco mine. The 2015 loss followed a 2014 profit of $657 million.
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