Lega Dembi Mine

Lega Dembi Mine
Entrance sign, 2002
Location
Laga Dembi Mine is located in Ethiopia
Laga Dembi Mine
Laga Dembi Mine
Regional StateOromia
Coordinates5°42′55″N 38°53′32″E / 5.71528°N 38.89222°E / 5.71528; 38.89222
Production
ProductsGold and silver
History
Active1930s to present
Owner
CompanyMIDROC

The Lega Dembi Mine is the largest gold mine in Ethiopia and is near Shakiso in Oromia Region.[1][2] Lega Dembi has a yearly production of around 4,500 kg of gold and silver, and is owned by MIDROC.[3] Pollution from the mine has resulted in environmental conflict that has exacerbated other political and ethnic conflict in the region.[citation needed]

The mine has exposed thousands of people to cyanide, arsenic and mercury pollution greatly exceeding World Health Organization guidelines, causing severe negative health effects including many stillbirths, birth defects, and deformities.[4] In the 2022 United Nations Special Rapporteur for Human Rights and the Environment, David Richard Boyd described the mine as one of the worst sacrifice zones in the world.[4] The mine's pollution has also threatened local communities' food security.[4] People have been killed for organising protests against the mine, and in 2018 at least five people were killed when security forces fired at demonstrators.[5] These protests resulted in temporary cancellation of the mining permit.

in February 2021, The Ministry of Mines, Petroleum and Natural Gas (MoMPNG) announced that it would allow MIDROC to reopen the mine.[6] A report in 2022 found that the government had "largely succeeded in suppressing any public expression of opposition to the mine."

  1. ^ Billay, A. Y.; Kisters, A. F. M.; Meyer, F. M.; Schneider, J. (1997-08-01). "The geology of the Lega Dembi gold deposit, southern Ethiopia: implications for Pan-African gold exploration". Mineralium Deposita. 32 (5): 491–504. doi:10.1007/s001260050117. ISSN 1432-1866. S2CID 129640685.
  2. ^ Ghebreab, W; Yohannes, E; Giorgis, L. W (1992-10-01). "The Lega Dembi gold mine: an example of shear zone-hosted mineralization in the Adola greenstone belt, Southern Ethiopia". Journal of African Earth Sciences (and the Middle East). 15 (3): 489–500. doi:10.1016/0899-5362(92)90030-G. ISSN 0899-5362.
  3. ^ Addis Fortune October 23, 2011[permanent dead link]
  4. ^ a b c Boyd, David R (2022). Sacrifice zones 50 of the Most Polluted Places on Earth (PDF). Special Rapporteur on Human Rights and the Environment.
  5. ^ "Ethiopian Mine Lega Dembi's Environmental Impact". BORGEN. 2020-11-01. Retrieved 2022-05-11.
  6. ^ Regassa, Asebe (2022-09-01). "Frontiers of Extraction and Contestation: dispossession, exclusion and local resistance against MIDROC Laga-Dambi Gold Mine, southern Ethiopia". The Extractive Industries and Society. 11: 100980. doi:10.1016/j.exis.2021.100980. ISSN 2214-790X. S2CID 238647498.