VOTE LONMIN IN PUBLIC EYE AWARDS
WORST CORPORATION OF 2012 EXPOSED PARALLEL TO WORLD ECONOMIC FORUM
Lonmin
shortlisted in international Public Eye Awards
Pietermaritzburg
& Johannesburg, South Africa, 04 January 2012 – The nexus between corporate
power and the political elite, and what this means for people and the
environment is being exposed in the run up to the World Economic Forum which
will take place in Davos, Switzerland between 23 to 27 January 2013. Here the
world’s elite 1% gather to discuss ways to increase deregulation of global
markets and enable transnational corporations to gain further strongholds over
the natural resources, livelihoods and labour of marginalized people across the
world.
groundWork and The Bench Marks Foundation’s submission of platinum mining
corporation, Lonmin Plc, to the Public Eye Award’s for the People’s Award,
was recently shortlisted with G4S, Repower, Alstom, Shell, Coal India and
Goldman Sachs. This submission was based on the human rights violations and
environmental destruction that the corporation has carried out since the
establishment of its mine in the Marikana region in the North West province of
South Africa.
In 2011 and
2012, miners and the community at the mine showed their anger at the
corporation by partaking in various protests. The Bench Marks Foundation, in
their 2012 report Policy Gap 6: Communities in the platinum minefields highlights the following main issues as areas of concern: Worker health and
safety; lack of local employment and mass firing of employees; failure of
corporate social responsibility projects; and the impact of mining on
agriculture and social stability in the area.
John Capel,
Director of The Bench Marks Foundation: “Mines such as Lonmin need to stop
obsessing with cutting costs which is usually at the expense of the
environment, labour and communities. They continue to find ways to shift their
social responsibilities. Often this turns into protests such as those we
experienced in Marikana.”
From 04 to
23 January 2013, the public are given the opportunity through the People’s
Award to make their voices heard about which of the seven corporations they
think have had the worst reputation in 2012. Like so many mines across
South Africa and the globe, Lonmin has continued to keep a horrendous track
record where profits have been put before people’s ability to meet a basic
standard of living. The tragedy that occurred at the mine on 16 August 2012,
where a total of 44 miners were massacred and 78 others were injured during a
protest for increased wages, illustrates this oppressive nature of the mining
corporation.
Bobby Peek,
Director of groundWork: “The events at Marikana must be seen in the context of
a failed democracy and crumbling state, whose interest is tied up in protecting
the wealth of the elite, rather than supporting the poor and responding to
their call for the ANC’s promised ‘better life for all’.”