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Title: Internationalism in Practice
Author: Anarchist Communist Group
Date: 11th September 2018
Language: en
Topics: Internationalism, Jackdaw, UK
Source: Retrieved on 2020-06-05 from https://www.anarchistcommunism.org/2018/09/11/internationalism-in-practice/

Anarchist Communist Group

Internationalism in Practice

From the mines around the world to the corporate power centres of London

Low wages and appalling working conditions, environmental destruction,

corporate greed- all these are components of the mining and extractive

industries. We have seen the treatment of miners in this country and

also the problem with extracting fossil fuels when we desperately need

to deal with climate change. Fracking is currently one of the main

battle fields. However, the worst of the mining industry is seen abroad,

in the global south, as companies benefit from the colonial legacy.

Mining is spread to even the remotest parts of the globe, completely

destroying the environment and cultures of indigenous peoples.

It is not just the mines but it is also the processing stages that pose

problems. Communities in Thoothukudi, Tamil Nahdu have been fighting the

expansion of Sterlite’s copper smelter which is already causing toxic

air and water pollution. However, the company has reacted to peaceful

protests with extreme violence. Protests have been going on for months

but the reaction of the company and the State has been extreme violence

with many arrests. In May thirteen people were killed by the police

during a protest. On Wednesday 23 May, a day after the massacre, a large

and noisy protest dominated by traditional Parai drummers was held at

the India High Commission in London. Protesters called on the British

government to launch an inquiry into the multiple legal, environmental

and human rights violations by Vedanta Resources, the parent company of

Sterlite, and consider de-listing the company from the London Stock

Exchange.

Vedanta Resources is one of the worst examples of global resource and

extraction companies with a history of human rights and environmental

abuses. Their owner is Anglo-Indian and based in London. They have

mining interests all over the world and everywhere they go there are

problems and protest movements develop.

They came into the news a few years ago with their attempt to mine

bauxite from the sacred mountain of the Dongria in Odisha state, eastern

India. Thanks to a concerted campaign with international support,

Vedanta backed down (www.survivalinternational.org/tribes/dongria).

Recently, Zambian farmers have organised resistance against the

pollution caused by copper mining. They are aiming to sue Vedanta and

managed to win the right to do so after Vedanta tried to stop them in

the courts in London.

All over the world resource industry workers and local communities are

struggling against the companies that are providing the minerals for our

way of life, eg mobile phones and all other electronic devices. The aim

as always is to maximise profits at the expense of people and the

environment. However, those who are directly battling these companies

are not alone. It is possible to organise practical solidarity for these

resistance movements. Companies like Vedanta often have headquarters in

London and are registered on the London Stock exchange. The London

Mining Network was set up to take advantage of this in order to support

anti-mining movements around the world.

From the website of London Mining Network

London Mining Network works in support of communities around the world

who are badly affected by mining – mining by companies based in, or

financed from, London. Mining is one of the most polluting industries in

the world. It is linked with conflict and human rights abuses. Most of

the world’s biggest mining companies, and many smaller mining companies,

are listed on the London Stock Exchange, and on its Alternative

Investment Market (AIM).

Since the protests against Vedanta and calls for the company’s

delisting, Vedanta has delisted itself. Whatever the implications of

this it is vital that we continue to show solidarity to those who

struggle around the world against the extraction industry as well as

fighting in this country against fracking.

For more information on struggles against Vedanta see:

www.foilvedanta.org

Article from Jackdaw 3