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WATER WORLD
One dead at Peru gold mine protest over scarce water
by Staff Writers
Lima (AFP) Sept 20, 2012


A struggle over dwindling water resources turned deadly at a mine in northern Peru, leading to clashes that killed one person and injured four others, police said Thursday.

Violence between police and residents of the city of Huaraz about 400 kilometers (250 miles) north of Lima broke out at the Pierina gold mine late Wednesday said Rosa Villanueva, a police spokeswoman.

"We have one person reported dead and four injured after clashes at the mine," she told AFP.

Villanueva said the unrest occurred when protesters became unruly at the entrance of the mine, where police were providing security.

Canadian company Barrick, which owns the Pierina mine, told RPP radio that the stand-off led to the death of a 54-year-old protester, who clashed with police while trying to enter the mine.

Since last week, residents in the region have held demonstrations and set up road blocks to protest the worsening water shortage, which the Canadian company denies having caused.

"The issue of water supply is a problem outside our control," said Gonzalo Quijandria, a spokesman for Barrick.

He said the company has tried to ameliorate the shortage by offering local residents water purified and treated at the mine, but that they refused.

"We have put in a water plant, but the people did not accept it," Quijandria said.

"The community does not want to use water that comes from the mine, even though it is treated and certified. They are demanding water that comes from outside the mine, but water is scarce around Huaraz," he said.

Barrick Gold Corporation, based in Toronto, Canada, is the world's largest gold mining company, with 26 active mines in countries including the United States, Canada, Australia, Peru, Chile, Argentina and Tanzania.

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Severe water shortage in South Sudan camps: Red Cross
Geneva (AFP) Sept 20, 2012 - The lack of clean water in refugee camps in South Sudan has become a "major humanitarian crisis" with people exposed to diseases due to contamination, the Red Cross said Thursday.

"Severe water shortages in refugee camps close to the Sudanese border have contributed to a rise in mortality and malnutrition rates to alarming levels," the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said in a statement.

In response to the crisis, the organisation said it had launched a project to improve water access for some 37,000 people in the worst-hit camp, Yusuf Batil.

"The humanitarian situation in Yusuf Batil camp in particular is extremely worrying. Conditions are dire and survival remains a struggle," Melker Mabeck, who heads the ICRC delegation in South Sudan, said in the statement.

"Owing to the lack of clean water, people are drinking contaminated surface water. Children are especially vulnerable to death from water-borne diseases such as diarrhoea," he said, pointing out that the ICRC was expanding the camp's water infrastructure and distributing buckets for water storage.

The organisation said it was also drawing a 15-kilometre (nine-mile) pipeline to provide better access to water for the 30,000 refugees living in the nearby Jamam camp.

The ICRC first launched operations in southern Sudan in 1986, and it set up a delegation in the capital of Juba when South Sudan became an independent country in July last year.



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WATER WORLD
Severe water shortage in South Sudan camps: Red Cross
Geneva (AFP) Sept 20, 2012
The lack of clean water in refugee camps in South Sudan has become a "major humanitarian crisis" with people exposed to diseases due to contamination, the Red Cross said Thursday. "Severe water shortages in refugee camps close to the Sudanese border have contributed to a rise in mortality and malnutrition rates to alarming levels," the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said in ... read more


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