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Corporate control over politics in pictures!
#1
A Googlish Spangish translation from the Spanish original. Story covers how legislators in Chubut, Argentina (likely everywhere really), are lobbied by mining companies to have the law changed in their favor. Screen shot below of politician Gustavo Munis receiving instructions on how to amend the legislation currently being debated in the chamber. Don't we all wish we could do the same with out local politicians. I do but I don't have their number to call during session.

Quote:

A deputy of Chubut received orders from a mining executive during a session

The provincial legislature Gustavo Muñiz was photographed exchanging text messages asking him to amend a bill in the debate by the installation of mining
- -

[Image: 1975543w645.jpg]Congressman Gustavo Muñiz (FPV) last night during the session of the Legislature of Chubut. Photo: Twitter / EnriqueViale
A political scandal broke last night in Chubut amid the public debate by the installation of large mining projects in the province. The provincial deputy from Trelew Gustavo Muñiz (Front for Victory) was photographed in full session of the Legislature exchanging text messages in which was instructed to amend a bill.
"Could you correct a term of Article 4 should read: ... Spanning the region or (...)" is displayed on the mobile screen of the legislator, who answers "(...) after the Executive what rule" . Photography began this morning viralizar social networks.
The information was confirmed by radio The Hundred one of the town of Comodoro Rivadavia. Muniz said he had received messages from several sectors once the project was closed.
Dip Muñiz confirms # La100Uno q is the photo d, q received messages from several sectors q message when the project closed Staba & - Navarre virginia (navarrovir) November 26, 2014
Moreover, local media identified as sender of messages to Gustavo Berardi, manager of the mining Yamana Gold, which has operations in Argentina in Gualcamayo (San Juan) and shareholding in Alumbrera (Catamarca).

Background

Chubut Legislature debated last night until dawn an initiative presented Assemblies Anti Mining, which managed to gather 13,000 signatures, which requested lawmakers to ban mining of any kind in Chubut.
The debate had been frozen for the past 11 years when the 5001 provincial law prohibiting mining and cyanide open sky was approved.
However, most legislators amended the draft assemblies and passed a new law that encourages debate on mining in the next 120 days and asks the local executive branch to convene after that period to popular consultations in the localities where mining could be installed (area of ​​the central plateau and mountain ranges Chubut).
Muñiz was one of 15 MPs who voted in favor of this idea. THE NATION tried to contact Muñiz, who answered the phone.
"The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways. The point, however, is to change it." Karl Marx

"He would, wouldn't he?" Mandy Rice-Davies. When asked in court whether she knew that Lord Astor had denied having sex with her.

“I think it would be a good idea” Ghandi, when asked about Western Civilisation.
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#2
Here is an article from 2012 from a mining magazine. Seems the mining industry has had quite a free rein in Chubut and the locals want to make that change.
Quote:

Argentina's Chubut governor wants more control over mining

The governor of Argentina's Chubut Province has introduced a bill he says will define a general framework for regulating and permitting mining and oil projects, including open-pit operations.
Author: Dorothy Kosich
Posted: Thursday , 21 Jun 2012
RENO (MINEWEB) -
The governor of the Chubut Province in Argentina has submitted to the provincial legislature a bill which provides for state ownership of mining operations and an increase of 3% to 8% in mining royalties.
Gov. Martin Buzzi introduced legislation that would also "directly impact the regulatory regime for mining in the province," said Pan American Silver, which owns the Navidad silver project in Chubut.
The legislation would maintain the 5001 law prohibiting open-pit gold mining that uses cyanide in mining processes. However, Buzzi stressed "we are defining the general framework" for mining and oil projects including labor practices, environmental compliance, community consultation, increased provincial royalties, defined government participation in projects, as well as defined areas where open-pit mining will be allowed.
However, the bill also mandates that 80% of a mining project's workforce must be residents of the province.
http://www.mineweb.com/mineweb/content/e...&sn=Detail
"The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways. The point, however, is to change it." Karl Marx

"He would, wouldn't he?" Mandy Rice-Davies. When asked in court whether she knew that Lord Astor had denied having sex with her.

“I think it would be a good idea” Ghandi, when asked about Western Civilisation.
Reply
#3
Here's one in English from a South American publication.

Quote:

Uproar over mining lobbying in Chubut


Chubut Justicialist Party (PJ) legislator Gustavo Muñiz was photographed exchanging messages with a representative of Canadian mining firm Yamana Gold during a debate in the Chubut provincial legislature over a key bill for the sector. The photograph caused on uproar in social media yesterday after the Legislature approved the bill in a 15-to-12 vote.

Lawmaker Gustavo Muñiz is photographed exchanging messages with Canadian firm
Chubut provincial Justicialist Party (PJ) lawmaker Gustavo Muñiz became the target of criticism yesterday after a picture exploded on social media yesterday that showed him exchanging messages on Tuesday night with a representative from the mining sector as the provincial Legislature was analyzing a bill that originally called for a ban on mining activities.
During the legislative debate, the measure was modified so that it now calls for public debates on mining and requests the provincial Executive to hold consultations about the possibility of allowing mining in specific areas that are likely to be apt for such activities.
Muñiz was pictured exchanging messages with Gastón Berardi, identified by local media as a manager at the Canada-based Yamana Gold mining company.
"Would it be possible to change one of the terms in Article 4? It should read: including the region or..." reads a message from Berardi visible on Muñiz's mobile phone. The PJ legislator typed back, "...later the Executive will imple..." seemingly indicating that the changes requested by Berardi could be included once the governor signed the measure into law.
The bill originally put forward was an initiative of approximately 17,000 anti-mining activists urging a total ban on mining activity in the province. The environmentalist initiative debated in the legislature as part of the procedures that allow for popular participation as a result of widespread petitions. Nonetheless, the bill was modified by the legislature in committee by the PJ and Victory Front (FpV) and passed with language that triggers a series of public debates on mining. Muñiz was one of 15 legislators to vote for the modified bill. A total of 12 votes against were recorded after an arduous debate.
"I received many messages and the one from the mining company was after the bill had already been discussed," Muñiz told a radio in Comodoro Rivadavia yesterday, effectively confirming the photograph's contents.
Provincial law currently prohibits open-pit mining that utilizes cyanide, a known toxin and contaminant that is commonly used in gold mining operations.
Yamana Gold in Argentina
Yamana Gold mines for gold in various countries of the Americas and currently participates in open-pit mining operations for gold in San Juan and Catamarca provinces. It also has interests in Chile and Brazil. The company describes itself as planning to "continue to build on this base through existing operating mine expansions, throughput increases, development of new mines, the advancement of its exploration properties and by targeting other gold consolidation opportunities with a primary focus in the Americas."
The Gualcamayo mine in San Juan, which is 100 percent operated by the Yamana, reportedly produced 120,337 ounces of gold in 2013 in the mine that has 1.4 million ounces of proven and probable reserves that are yet to be extracted.
While Yamana was the only mining company to be publicly quoted for expressing its positions, activists see it as a given that other companies also had an interest in the bill and expressed their opinoins.
The most well-known foreign mining interest in Argentina, Pascua Lama in San Juan province, is operated by Canadian-mining company Barrick Gold. Pascua Lama is currently on standby as the Chilean government has halted operations on its side of the mine, which straddles the border high in the Andes mountains.
Mining switch
According to the terms of the bill, mining activity is suspended in the province for 120 days but the Executive Branch, under the leadership of Governor Martín Buzzi is obliged to organize and guarantee a public debate on mining in the entire province and that once it is complete a binding referendum on mining activity in the regions most likely to be apt for extractive industries.
The areas most likely to be hold mineral reserves worth exploiting are in the central plateau and mountain ranges, far from the Trelew coastal area that Muñiz represents in the Legislature.
Legislators aligned with former Chubut governor Mario das Neves and the provincial Radical party (UCR) expressed support for the initial version of the draft. Despite the vote, debate continued yesterday in the local press among provincial lawmakers and environmentalist groups expressed their dissatisfaction with the modification to the original proposal.
Furthermore, once the bill was approved there were requests form the opposition calling on Buzzi to veto the new legislation. These primarily came from Senator Mario Cimadevilla, leader of the provincial Radical party, who said that the exchange of messages merited a veto of the bill.
Herald staff with online media
"The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways. The point, however, is to change it." Karl Marx

"He would, wouldn't he?" Mandy Rice-Davies. When asked in court whether she knew that Lord Astor had denied having sex with her.

“I think it would be a good idea” Ghandi, when asked about Western Civilisation.
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