viernes, 14 de marzo de 2014

"A Slow Genocide of the People": Uranium Mining Leaves Toxic Nuclear Legacy on Indigenous Land | Democracy Now!

"A Slow Genocide of the People": Uranium Mining Leaves Toxic Nuclear Legacy on Indigenous Land | Democracy Now!



The iconic Grand Canyon is the site of a battle over toxic uranium
mining. Last year, a company called Energy Fuels Resources was given
federal approval to reopen a mine six miles from the Grand Canyon’s
popular South Rim entrance. A coalition of Native and environmental
groups have protested the decision, saying uranium mining could strain
scarce water sources and pose serious health effects. Diné (Navajo)
tribal lands are littered with abandoned uranium mines. From 1944 to
1986, 3.9 million tons of uranium ore were chiseled and blasted from the
mountains and plains of the region. More than 1,000 mines have closed,
but the mining companies never properly disposed of their radioactive
waste piles, leading to a spike in cancer rates and other health
ailments. Broadcasting from Flagstaff, Arizona, we speak with Taylor
McKinnon, director of energy with Grand Canyon Trust, and Klee Benally, a
Diné (Navajo) activist and musician. "It’s really a slow genocide of
the people, not just indigenous people of this region, but it’s
estimated that there are over 10 million people who are residing within
50 miles of abandoned uranium mines," Benally says. Benally also
describes the struggle to preserve the San Francisco Peaks, an area
considered sacred by 13 Native tribes, where the Snowbowl ski resort is
using treated sewage water to make snow.