By Derek Moscato
03 Mar 2005 at 02:10 AM EST
"The worst foreign mining companies who plunder and ravage the environment and our mineral resources, as well as their military and police protectors, will be punished," said Gregorio Rosal, spokesperson for the country’s Communist party, who went on to say that his party’s military wing "can carry out a wide range of measures to disable the operations of the most destructive mining companies."
Fear and Loathing in
The development was worthy of recent heavy coverage in
The story went on to say that some of the supporters of the Communist Party of the
It’s likely that more than
The newspaper went on to explain that "as the rhetoric and threats of attacks intensify, students and priests from the Philippines’ powerful Catholic community have joined forces to launch a campaign to gather one million signatures nationwide to oppose the operation of transnational mining companies in the country."
Rhetoric Versus Reality?
All of this flies in the face of the good news coming out of the country’s mining industry, including the Supreme Court’s upholding of the legality of the 1995 Philippone Mining Act, which allows for 100% ownership of large mining projects.
Many junior mining concerns have been counting on increased economic and political stability to help bring investor interest back to the country.
Alberta-based miner Mindoro Resources [MIO.V], which is focused on gold-copper projects in the country, is a case in point. In a recent interview with Resource Investor Mindoro VP Penny Gould argued that changes like that have helped prop the local industry up. "We've been there since 1996, and we've seen many changes, particularly in the past few years," she said.
Shares of
And shares of TVI Pacific [TVI.TO], another
The company is feeling heat from the London-based Peoples Indigenous Link and local church-backed environmentalists about its program at Canatuan.
Earlier in February, company president Clifford James had a private meeting with
According to TVI, she assured the company at the time "that she and her government would take all measures they could to support TVI and to resolve any problems encountered with local administrations and civil society."
TVI did not return messages from Resource Investor as of publication time.
The Media Wildcard
But in addition to the student-activist/Catholic/Communist coalition, the country’s outspoken media has sometimes positioned itself against the government’s pro-industry position.
"When nothing else seems to be working for the Philippine economy, the government is now promoting the country as the new
The downer commentary is complemented by some unflattering international reports.
A recently released business survey entitled Moving Toward a Better Investment Climate and conducted jointly by Asian Development Bank and World Bank cites serious economic challenges for the country including weak macroeconomic fundamentals, corruption, infrastructure shortcomings, and excessive bureaucracy.
And a 2003 survey of 158 mining firms conducted by the Vancouver-based economic think tank The Fraser Institute found that the
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Prudent Investor's Comment:
For the commies and mining detractors: they are immersed with absolute myopia and damaged culture. Eternal perdition awaits the country if these regressive thinkers prevail....B@#$%S!!!
Look around....Latin America, Australia, Canada, South Africa, Thailand, Indonesia and Malaysia (even India is now in the process of opening its mining industry to foreigners) or even some African states...are survived by extractives....are they inundated with environmental problems, plagued by social upheaveals? In Africa the political and social tumult arises not from extractives but administrative mismanagement and corruption. To say that these would be disadvantageous to the country is one HUGE pile of DUNG!!!
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