UAE’s $1 billion mining project in Colombia suspected of corruption and opposed by masses

Protests in Bucaramanga (Image: La Vanguardia)

More than 50,000 people reportedly took to the streets in northeast Colombia on Friday in an attempt to end a $1 billion gold mining project they say will pollute their water supply.

The protesters in Santander capital Bucaramanga, a city of half a million people, want mining company Minesa to abandon its controversial plans to mine for gold in the nearby Santurban paramo.

The United Arab Emirates reportedly invested $1 billion in Minesa, but the project is opposed by a large number of people in the Santander province, which is largely dependent on the paramo for its drinking water.

María Eugenia Lucena via La Vanguardia

UAE to invest $1B in controversial Colombia gold mine: minister


Minea CEO Santiago Urdinola disregarded the public outrage last month in a video that was leaked last month and claimed to already have a counteroffensive ready.

The CEO, who used to be the head of Colombia’s former mining association, said that as long as he is able to convince Bogota decision that the public protests were promoted by leftist opposition Senator Gustavo Petro, a fierce critic of the administration of President Ivan Duque, “we are okay.”

Minesa CEO Santiago Urdinola

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Whether this plan will still work after it was made public is unlikely.

Following the controversy triggered by Minesa’s CEO, the Transparency Secretary of President Ivan Duque, asked to closely monitor the company for “possible acts of corruption around the application for an environmental licence processed by Minesa.”

The mining company wants to investment of UAE’s $1 billion over the next five years, and hopes to produce 410,000 ounces of gold per year for a period of 20 years.

The Soto Norte project is opposed by locals who are concerned over their water supply and others who oppose the destruction of one of Colombia’s most unique ecosystems.

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