Off The Wire
UPDATE 4-Five Vale staff and contractors arrested after Brazil dam disaster
On Monday, a presidential task force contemplated forcing out Vale's management, but by Tuesday senior officials pushed back on the idea. "There aren't conditions for any degree of interference. It would not be a good signal to the market," presidential chief of staff Onyx Lorenzoni said in a news briefing.
'DESTROYING MINAS GERAIS'
Chief Financial Officer Luciano Siani said Vale was doing
all it could, offering money to mourners, extra tax payments to
local government, a special membrane to remove mud from the
river and major investments to make its dams safer.
Yet residents in the devastated town of Brumadinho have been
unmoved, watching in shock and anger as one dead body after
another has been pulled from the mud.
Following a deadly 2015 tailings dam collapse just a few
towns over at a mine half-owned by Vale, the disaster remained
unforgivable in the eyes of many Brazilians.
"Vale is destroying Minas Gerais," said Robinson Passos, 52,
who lost a cousin and friends in Brumadinho.
"There's anger, sadness, everything," he said, holding back
tears as he surveyed the destruction in Corrego do Feijao, a
hamlet within Brumadinho that gave its name to the mine at the
center of the disaster.
At the headquarters for the local mining union, which lost
more than one in 10 members by organizers' count, treasurer José
Francisco Mateiro blamed the company and authorities for putting
him and his comrades at risk.
"They call it an accident but the design of those dams was
premeditated," he said. "There have been warnings about all
mining dams for a long time now."
Vale CEO Fabio Schvartsman said the facility was up to code
and equipment had shown the dam was stable just two weeks before
the collapse.
"We are 100 percent within all the standards, and that
didn't do it," he said in a Sunday TV interview.
Siani said the company would donate 100,000 reais ($26,600)
to each family that had lost a loved one, adding the company
would continue paying mining royalties to Brumadinho despite a
halt in operations there.
The company was building a membrane to stop the flow of mud
now snaking down the Paraopeba River. A "bold" investment plan
would speed the process of making dams more secure, he said.
Prosecutors and politicians have not been impressed.
Government ministers have said Brazil's mining regulations
are broken. The country's top prosecutor said the company should
be criminally prosecuted and executives held personally
responsible. ($1 = 3.73 reais)
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FACTBOX-Vale tailings dam collapse adds to long list of mining
disasters BREAKINGVIEWS-Vale's Brazil dam damage will hurt its peers too ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>
(Reporting by Gram Slattery in Brumadinho and Pedro Fonseca in
Rio de Janeiro;
Additional reporting by Marta Nogueira and Gabriel Stargardter
in Rio de Janeiro, Lisandra Paraguassu and Ricardo Brito in
Brasilia
Editing by Brad Haynes and Matthew Lewis)