‘Don't Come if You Like Gold’: Turks March against Planned Gold Mine

Environmental activists take part in a march to protest against what they say will be pollution from a gold mine project near the town of Kirazli, Turkey, August 5, 2019. (Reuters)
Environmental activists take part in a march to protest against what they say will be pollution from a gold mine project near the town of Kirazli, Turkey, August 5, 2019. (Reuters)
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‘Don't Come if You Like Gold’: Turks March against Planned Gold Mine

Environmental activists take part in a march to protest against what they say will be pollution from a gold mine project near the town of Kirazli, Turkey, August 5, 2019. (Reuters)
Environmental activists take part in a march to protest against what they say will be pollution from a gold mine project near the town of Kirazli, Turkey, August 5, 2019. (Reuters)

Thousands of Turks including opposition lawmakers staged a peaceful and unusually large protest on the outskirts of a small western town on Monday against what they say will be pollution from a foreign-owned gold mine project.

Public opposition to the site owned by Dogu Biga Mining, the Turkish subsidiary of Canada-based Alamos Gold Inc, mounted after the firm allegedly cut down four times the number of trees than it declared in an environmental impact report, said Reuters.

Near the town of Kirazli in Turkey’s Canakkale province, a few dozen environmentalists have slept in tents since July 26 as part of what they call a “Watch for Water and Conscience”.

Activists say cyanide will be used to extract gold in the Alamos project and will contaminate the soil and waters of a nearby dam. The Turkish government rejects charges that the mine will damage the environment and denies cyanide will be used.

Turkish environmentalists were part of protests in 2013 over a project to demolish Istanbul’s Gezi Park, which grew into nationwide anti-government unrest that prompted a violent security crackdown and hundreds of arrests.

On Monday, some 5,000 protesters from across the country gathered on a hill near the planned mine site carrying signs reading: “Don’t come if you like gold,” and “We can do without gold, we can’t do without the Kaz Mountains.”

From there they walked to the project site where security forces were limited to a few dozen gendarmerie, and they were allowed entry to a field on the property.

The mine will harm the ecological balance of a wooded region near Mount Ida - or Kaz, as it locally known - which produces huge amounts of oxygen and is home to diverse flora, said Rebiye Unuvar, deputy mayor of Canakkale.

“In six years, they will leave after this area becomes arid and is turned into a desert,” she said. “We will fight until the end to stop the eco-slaughter here.”

TEMA, a charitable group focusing on forestry, said 195,000 trees were cut down for the project, well above the 46,000 target previously announced by Dogu Biga.

A statement by Dogu Biga said 13,400 trees had been cut down for the mine and that trees would re-planted in the area once work is completed. The company did not immediately respond to a request for further comment.

Arid hilltop, blue sea

Supporters of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s AK Party say large infrastructure projects, including Istanbul’s new airport and a third bridge across the Bosphorus strait, support the economy, which has been driven for years by a construction boom.

Government officials say mine projects are necessary for Turkey to lessen its dependence on imports by using its own natural resources, also helping lower its current account deficit.

Burak Ciftci, 34, was one of the first people to camp on the fringes of the town of Kirazli. “We definitely do not have an aim such as attacking the mine, (what we are doing now) is civilian resistance,” he said.

“We thought the Canadian company might have a sense of humor so we played the guitar yesterday and took balloons to them with our kids.”

Asim Yildiz, 58, said he visits the area every summer and that he joined the protests on Monday to raise awareness about the environmental impact of the gold mining project. “This is our nature, our right. What can we give to future generations? Will we give them the arid hilltop or the blue sea?”

Turkey approved 36,122 mining, energy and other projects between 2012 and 2017 located on a total of 246,257 hectares of woodland, according to the Foresters Foundation of Turkey. Government data shows that forests made up 29% of Turkey as of 2018 and had increased in size in recent years.



Pope Francis Slams World’s ‘Shameful Inability’ to Stop Israel-Hamas War

This overview shows destroyed buildings in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip on October 7, 2024 on the first anniversary of the ongoing war in the Palestinian territory between Israel and Hamas. (AFP)
This overview shows destroyed buildings in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip on October 7, 2024 on the first anniversary of the ongoing war in the Palestinian territory between Israel and Hamas. (AFP)
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Pope Francis Slams World’s ‘Shameful Inability’ to Stop Israel-Hamas War

This overview shows destroyed buildings in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip on October 7, 2024 on the first anniversary of the ongoing war in the Palestinian territory between Israel and Hamas. (AFP)
This overview shows destroyed buildings in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip on October 7, 2024 on the first anniversary of the ongoing war in the Palestinian territory between Israel and Hamas. (AFP)

Pope Francis criticized on Monday what he called the "shameful inability" of the international community to end the war in the Middle East, one year after Hamas' devastating attack on Israel.

"A year ago, the fuse of hatred was lit; it did not sputter, but exploded in a spiral of violence," he said in an open letter to Catholics in the region.

"It seems that few people care about what is most needed and what is most desired: dialogue and peace," he wrote. "Violence never brings peace. History proves this, yet years and years of conflict seem to have taught us nothing."

Francis, who has also made Monday a day of fasting and prayers for peace for Catholics globally, has spoken more openly in recent weeks about the Hamas-Israel conflict, and has become more vocal in his criticism of Israel's military campaign.

On Sept. 29, the 87-year-old pontiff criticized Israeli airstrikes in Lebanon that killed Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah as well as non-combatants, suggesting the airstrikes went "beyond morality".

Earlier in September, the pope called Israel's actions in Lebanon "unacceptable" and urged the international community to do everything possible to halt the fighting.

In his letter on Monday, Francis directly addressed Gazans: "I am with you, the people of Gaza, long embattled and in dire straits. You are in my thoughts and prayers daily."

"I am with you, who have been forced to leave your homes, to abandon schooling and work and to find a place of refuge from the bombing. ... I am with you, who are afraid to look up for fear of fire raining down from the skies," he wrote.