British mining companies are abusing human rights all over the world at the same time as making record profits and exploring new 'frontiers' in territories plagued by conflict. A report authored by Mark Curtis for the NGO, Want on Want, documents the impacts of large-scale mining on communities in twenty countries.
London is the centre of the world's mining industry and many of the world's largest mining companies are either UK-based or part-British, notably Anglo American, Rio Tinto, BHP Billiton and Xstrata.
The report shows that these largest four British companies made profits of around £14 billion in 2006. Much of this wealth is simply being extracted from poor countries, with the complicity of Southern governments, due to low tax rates and profit repatriation allowances; there is also evidence that some companies are sometimes using creative accounting techniques to avoid paying taxes.
The report includes analysis of the following cases:
All this being done with the active support of the British government, which continues to press for 'favourable investment climates' in developing countries while involving mining company leaders in various corporate social responsibility initiatives and rejecting increased regulation of corporations. Whitehall has close personal connections to the big mining companies. A director of Rio Tinto, for example, sits on the Ministry of Defence's Defence Management Board, responsible for 'success in the military tasks we undertake at home and abroad'.
source:www.waronwant.org
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