Brazil rescuers search for hundreds
missing after mining dam burst
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[January 26, 2019]
By Gram Slattery
BRUMADINHO, Brazil (Reuters) - Brazilian
rescuers continued searching on Saturday for some 200 missing people
after a tailings dam burst at an iron ore mine owned by Vale SA, just
over three years after the miner was involved in a similar disaster
nearby.
Seven bodies were found in the hours after the Friday dam burst, but the
toll was expected to rise sharply, said Avimar de Melo Barcelos, the
mayor of the hard-hit town of Brumadinho in the mining-intensive state
of Minas Gerais.
Vale Chief Executive Fabio Schvartsman said only one-third of the
roughly 300 workers at the site had been accounted for. He said a
torrent of sludge tore through the mine's offices, including a cafeteria
during lunchtime.
President Jair Bolsonaro was set to visit Minas Gerais and fly over the
disaster area on Saturday morning, after dispatching three ministers
there on Friday.
The state is still recovering from the collapse in November 2015 of a
larger dam that killed 19 people in Brazil's worst environmental
disaster. That dam, owned by the Samarco Mineracao SA joint venture
between Vale and BHP Group Ltd, buried a village and poured toxic waste
into a major river.
Schvartsman said the dam that burst on Friday at the Feijao iron mine
was being decommissioned and its capacity was about a fifth of the total
waste spilled at Samarco. He said equipment had shown the dam was stable
on Jan. 10 and it was too soon to say why it collapsed.
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A house is seen in an area next to a dam owned by Brazilian miner
Vale SA that burst, in Brumadinho, Brazil January 25, 2019.
REUTERS/Washington Alves
The Feijao mine is one of four in Vale's Paraoeba complex, which
includes two processing plants and produced 26 million tonnes of
iron ore in 2017, or about 7 percent of Vale's total output,
according to information on the company's website.
Schvartsman declined to comment on how output would be affected.
Operations at Samarco remain halted over new licensing, while the
companies have worked to pay damages out of court, including an
agreement that quashed a 20 billion reais ($5.31 billion) civil
lawsuit last year. Federal prosecutors suspended but have still not
closed an even larger lawsuit.
(Reporting by Gram Slattery; Writing by Brad Haynes; Editing by
Sonya Hepinstall)
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