After 500 years Bolivian silver mountain risks collapse
POTOSI, Bolivia, Oct 23 (AFP) - The mountain holding one of the
world’s greatest silver deposits is at risk of collapse after five
centuries of exploitation, Bolivian officials say, calling for moves to
save the historic site.
“It looks like an hour glass that is slowly sinking,” said Celestino
Condori, president of the civil committee of Potosi, an organization
dedicated to enforcing sustainable procedures for the rampant mining
that is hollowing out the mountain in a bid to reach its silver, lead,
zinc and tin.
Potosi, once South America’s wealthiest city due to the silver mine
within the conical mountain which looms above it, is now even more
treacherous for miners than usual, because of regular landslides
prompted by some 90 kilometers (55 miles) of tunnels within the hulking
Cerro Rico, or “rich hill”.
Around 12,000 workers enter the mines each day, including many
children from poverty-stricken homes who lie about their age in order to
earn a daily wage of just over one dollar.
The vast wealth hidden within the hill was once said to be enough to
build a bridge of silver from this town all the way to Spain — thousands
of kilometers (miles) away across the South American continent and the
Atlantic Ocean.
The process sees some 4,300 tons of mountain — earth and precious
minerals — removed every day. After five centuries of continuous
operation, there are now 619 open pit mines, including 120 that are
currently in use, and an extensive tunnel network.
Landslides, tunnel collapses, falling rocks and the unpredictable
release of toxic gases have led to 20 miner deaths since early 2009,
according to the Federation of Mining Cooperatives (Fedecomin).
On Tuesday a 17-year-old miner died after inhaling a lethal dose of
carbon monoxide while retrieving zinc deep in the Cerro Rico hillside.
The deaths have left Fedecomin head Julio Quinones wondering: “What
is the national government doing” to help?
The demand for better safety regulations and to prevent further
deterioration of Cerro Rico kicked off a 19-day civic strike in Potosi
in August, prompting the government to launch a study on how to save the
mountain.
The dismay of local residents and officials alike at the reticence of
President Evo Morales to uphold stricter regulations has only sharpened,
however, since the triumphant rescue this month of 33 trapped miners in
neighboring Chile.
Morales gave Carlos Mamani, the 23-year-old Bolivian miner who was
trapped with his Chilean comrades for a record 69 days, a hero’s welcome
this week at the Quemado presidential palace in La Paz.
“What bothers us,” Quinones told AFP, “is that the president can
mobilize immediately to get involved (in the Chilean saga), but when
such accidents occur in Potosi or elsewhere in Bolivia, which sees
collapses with tragic results, (Morales) never gets involved.”
Mining generates billions of dollars in revenue for mineral-rich
Bolivia, and the government has taken an especially hands-off approach
to this historic symbol of wealth, in operation since 1545.
First exploited by the Incas, it was taken over by Spanish colonists
and their tens of thousands of indigenous and African slaves, then the
Bolivian government and now by private firms.
Despite the centuries of mining, authorities however estimate vast
riches still remain to be found. Arnulfo Gutierrez, secretary of mines
for the Potosi department, told AFP the exploitation has “exposed eight
levels of the mountain,” each measuring some 30 meters (98 feet) deep
within the structure, yet there are still “10 levels more” containing
the precious minerals. “The mountain is huge, and its wealth is
incalculable,” he said.
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