by MrBill » Thu 04 May 2006, 04:29:56
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('CARVER', '
')We are also still putting puppet governments in place, supporting and protecting the leaders and wealthy families. If we can't buy them, or fail to create a coup, we will try to assassinate or even invade. We open up the country to our big corporations, cause pollution and destruction to our benefit and that of the elite while hurting the many poor locals. Run them up in debt (to pay our corporations to do projects there) so we can milk them till eternity, and call it: aid (We convince/pay the leader to dig a hole for his country and we'll dig it for them to make sure it is deep enough for them not to be able to get out by themselves). And then expect that it will not bite us in the ass at the worst possible moment. Creating lots of hostility towards us in most of the countries with the resources we depend upon more and more each day, resulting in terrorism and all. We are fools indeed! And then we even think that we are the ones that should be compensated by Big Oil (because they destroyed some of our demand?), how sad is that?
To be honest, I think that is a load of crap. Most countries are simply a mess because of corruption with or without any outside help. Clans, tribes, family politics, call it what you want. You never saw someone screw a Native Indian like another Native Indian over tribal politics and dividing the spoils of office. They do not need any outside help, they are pretty good at it themselves. Ditto for most politicians. Even where there are no differences to exploit, we seem to invent them. Take Republicans and Democrats for want of a better example. Basically both parties are tax & spend and while the voters get worked up about the differences between them, the politicians themselves are busy helping themselves to the pork. And politics in Canada or Japan or anywhere else does not get any better, just worse in some places like Italy for example. So take most poor countries and you will just find a lot of corruption with or without foreign companies. Guess I will just link this article on the Salomon Islands as an example. Too tired to fight much about this issue. So take it for what it is worth.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')HONIARA, May 3 (Reuters) - An abandoned gold mine in a jungle in the Solomon Islands, one of the richest veins in the South Pacific but shut due to ethnic violence, could be a lifeline for the troubled nation.
The government hopes the Gold Ridge mine, expected to resume gold production by end-2007, could spark vital investment and create jobs in an impoverished nation where just 9 percent of people are formally employed.
Finance Minister Peter Boyers said the youth of the Solomons, half the island's 500,000-strong population, need a future if the chain of 992 islands is to end the cycle of instability.
"These youth want a vision and some sort of hope that they are going to have a future, whether it's formal or informal -- it's our responsibility to create it," Boyers told Reuters in an interview at parliament house in the capital, Honiara.
Companies such as Japan's Sumitomo Metal Mining had shown interest in nickel and cobalt exploration, he said.
For most of this decade, political risk has plagued the Solomons, a nation with rich gold veins, possible offshore oil and gas, and nickel and cobalt deposits hidden under its jungles.
A new prime minister is to be chosen in a secret ballot in parliament on Thursday, after the election of deputy prime minister Snyder Rini as leader sparked riots, fuelled by rumours that his government was influenced by local Chinese businessmen.
Rini resigned after days of riots targeting the tiny Chinese business community in Honiara, but leaving foreign troops and police patrolling the streets -- an image the Solomons fears will hinder foreign investment.
The political instability has continued since April when voters ousted half the parliament in a national election dominated by corruption, expecting a new government to emerge.
The Solomons was rocked by a coup in 2000 and was on the brink of bankruptcy and collapse in 2003 due to ethnic fighting, forcing neighbouring South Pacific nations to send peacekeepers.
Peace was restored, but there was little economic recovery in the past three years, leaving many in the 500,000 population angry at what they see as continuing political corruption.
JUNGLE MINE
Dense lantana weeds cover rusted earth-moving equipment at the Gold Ridge mine, an hour and a half's drive from Honiara.
Worker camps and tool sheds are barely visible through the dense tropical foliage. Only a handful of squatters now pan the pitted moonscape in search of gold dust.
Australian Solomons Gold (ASG) was granted rights to rehabilitate the mine two years ago. The company's chief operating officer, Mike Christie, said there had been delays to the project, the price of doing business in the Solomons.
When ASG, about 40 percent owned by Australian miner Michelago Ltd., completed the ownership deal for the mine in May last year, the company had aimed to be producing gold by the end of 2006, but that target has now been pushed back a year.
Before the warring factions in the province overran the mine and chased workers off with machetes in 2000, Gold Ridge was yielding 150,000 ounces of gold annually, making it one of the biggest lodes in the region behind neighbouring Papua New Guinea.
ASG plans to mine about 120,000 ounces of gold annually when it starts operations late next year.
Gold bullion sells for as much as $636 an ounce on exchanges half a world away in New York and London, more than double the bullion price when the mine closed six years ago.
Boyers said the Solomons, which relies on aid for 70 percent of its budget, has worked hard to restart the mine, offering tax and duty exemptions.
"We're basically going to lose a considerable amount of revenue through that," said Boyers, declining to give a specific figure. "But that's a sacrifice the government's taking to get that industry moving in the hope that further mines might open."
Australian Solomons Gold, which plans to list on the Australian Stock Exchange with an initial public offering by mid-2006, hopes to employ up to 600 people at Gold Ridge.
Christie said three percent of the expected annual revenue from Gold Ridge of SB$600 million ($78 million) would be split between the government and local landowners.
"You don't have to go too far out of Honiara to find there's little or no clean water supply. Sanitation is an issue, along with schools, and road transport," Christie told Reuters.
"Gold Ridge can set an example in which projects can invest and prosper in the Solomon Islands and in such a way that the benefits are shared," he said.
($1=SB$7.60)
Just a bunch of locals fighting for control over the spoils even if that means less for everyone. Even if a foreign company comes in and improves the situation for a while, it just leaves more for them to fight over later. You cannot win. If you do nothing, you're ignoring the plight of the poor. If you try to help them, you're exploiting them.
Nothing to do with protecting the rights of the wealthy or the elite. Which in my mind is some sort of empty strawman argument. On one hand we are supposed to respect other countries sovereignty even if they engage in genocide and ethnic cleansing. On the otherhand, if we do business with their elected leaders (rightly, wrongly, with or without corruption and vote rigging) we are somehow propping up puppet regimes?