First witnesses testify in Newmont trial: Report
Friday, October 7 2005 - 11:40 AM WIB
The trial that opened nearly two months ago is being closely watched by business leaders, who say a guilty verdict could set back Indonesia's improving foreign investment climate, and environmentalists eager to see if the government will crack down on a multinational company.
The Denver-based company's Indonesian subsidiary and its American director Richard Ness have been charged with dumping mercury and arsenic-laced pollutants into the Buyat Bay on Sulawesi island, allegedly causing villagers to develop skin diseases and other illnesses.
Ness, who maintains Newmont did nothing wrong, faces up to 10 years in prison and the company a $68,000 fine if convicted.
Rasit Rahman, a 38-year-old fisherman who lives near the mine, was the prosecution's first witness.
"I got lumps on my neck and suffered from dizziness," he told the court, also claiming that fish stocks had been depleted in the bay since Newmont began operating there in 1996.
The company stopped mining two years ago after extracting all the gold it could. But it continued processing ore until Aug. 31, 2004, when the mine was permanently shut.
Under cross examination, the fisherman said he did not go to a local doctor for treatment, but waited until several of the villagers went to the capital, Jakarta, to get a check up in a trip widely covered by the media.
Several such trips were paid for by environmental groups seeking to bring charges against Newmont.
Rahman said he paid for the trip himself, bringing jeers from Newmont supporters in the courtroom.
Newmont's chief lawyer, Luhut Pangarribean, claimed Rahman had signed a statement stating he was never sick, and the attorney showed the court a photograph of Rahman signing the document.
The statement was taken by a local legal aid institute in the area, but Pangarribean gave no more details.
"The witness statements have no link to the charges against Newmont," he said.
The company has argued that a police investigation was flawed and that there was no evidence of pollution or that villagers became ill. (*)
