Showing posts with label reuters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reuters. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Terry Wade on Ollanta Humala: 100% agreement here

A top analysis note by Terry Wade of Reuters today, the subject being that dude Ollanta Humala who gets to play at President of Peru as of tomorrow morning. Here below is how Wade's note begins and your humble scribe highly recommends that you click through and read the whole piece, as it's oodles more observant and insightful than the usual mediocrity you read on Peru politics. 

LIMA (Reuters) – Peru’s leftist President-elect Ollanta Humala, who takes office on Thursday, has dared to move further toward the center, if not the right, than the man he emulated during his campaign — Brazil’s former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. Humala, a former army commander who used to scare investors with fiery rhetoric, won office in June after promising to govern as a business-friendly leftist like Lula.
But the cabinet Humala has assembled, by nearly every measure, is more conservative than the one Lula put together when he took office in Brazil in 2003. That suggests Humala will keep the existing economic model intact while intensifying the fight against poverty that afflicts a third of Peruvians.

CONTINUES HERE

Monday, June 13, 2011

Superb piece on copper by Andy Home of Reuters today

Reuters dude Andy Home is a must-read on copper and today he adds several degrees of intelligence to the current debate on China demand levels. Get the note here, meanwhile below one of the charts lifted from the note.

click to enlarge

Monday, January 3, 2011

Peru 2011 country risks, according to Reuters

Here's a good note out of Reuters today that sums up the three main risk issues facing Peru in 2011.
1) The Presidential Elections (Toledo featured as frontrunner...toldyaso)
2) Social Conflicts (with mining front and centre)
3) Drug Trafficking (the one nobody ever seems to talk about...i wonder why?)

Anyway, it's a good snappy report and worth your time. Go read.

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Rusoro (RML.v) likely to move up on this news


Rusoro (RML.v) has had a wretched year, but this news out of Reuters this morning should bring it some relief:

CARACAS Aug 12 (Reuters) - Gold miners in Venezuela will be allowed to export 50 percent of production, up from 30 percent previously, Venezuela's Central Bank said Thursday.

The change came in new rules published by the bank in response to requests from private companies. (Reporting by Eyanir Chinea; Writing by Andrew Cawthorne; Editing by John Picinich)


The word on this has been floating around for about a week, but until rumour becomes fact in Venezuela, it's best not to count chickens.

Friday, July 16, 2010

Peru mining and social responsibility: an excellent report and video from Reuters

This is great journalism and should be required viewing/reading for anyone interested in the South American mining scene. Check out this video....



....and read the news report that accompanies the vid, as even those immersed in the sector will learn a lot. This isn't a report promoting one agenda or another, it's a fine job of work that goes beyond the obvious and looks for equitable solutions to today's problems. As the question posed at the end of the story poses:
How is it that a country that is increasingly well positioned in the global economy and has attracted loads of investment finds itself with so little public support for the projects on which it depends?
Quite right.

Thursday, April 22, 2010

It's Competition Time, courtesy of Reuters dumbasses

The first person to spot the mistake in this Reuters report on Semafo (SMF.to) out this morning wins a prize. The full report pasted out here:

UPDATE 1-Semafo sees superior study results at S.Africa mine

Thu Apr 22, 2010 10:10am EDT

Stocks

Semafo Inc.

SMF.TO

$5.79

-0.03-0.52%

8:40am EDT

* Study shows 5 pct rise in bedrock recovery at Mana

* Sees C$40 mln additional cash flow

* Says expects superior pre-feasibility study results

April 22 (Reuters) - Canadian gold miner Semafo Inc (SMF.TO) said studies showed a 5 percent rise in the recovery rate in a South African mine, which would mean higher cash flow for the company.

"Based on the outcome of rock mechanics and metallurgical studies, we anticipate superior pre-feasibility study results," Mining Operations Manager, Patrick Moryoussef said in a statement.

The new estimated average recovery rate of 81 percent at the Mana mine would add over C$40 million in cash flow from the bedrock reserves, the company said.

The study by SGS South Africa and Golder Associates showed better-than-expected results including a fall in the estimated reagents consumption to process the ore.

The company now expects results of pre-feasibility and feasibility studies in the second and third quarters.

Shares of the company were up 1.3 percent at C$5.9 in morning trade on the Toronto Stock Exchange. (Reporting by Arnika Thakur in Bangalore; Editing by Savio D'Souza)

Monday, October 5, 2009

Bolivia: In a spooky development, mainstream financial newswire actually does its job for a change and reports facts about Evonomy

Hats off to Eduardo Garcia of Reuters Bolivia (we've feted the dude before due to his better-than-the-rest reports on Bolly) who published the following report on Reuters newswires last week (h/t reader PD).

To finally see some credit given by serious financial media (not just sillyblogs like this one) to the Bolivian economic success story is a refreshing change, but Garcia gets into the nitty-gritty as he explains how Evo's radical communist idea of "giving money to the poor" actually helps the economy.....wild huh? It also has wild'n'crazy things called "facts" that include:

  • Bolivia's record international currency reserves
  • How Bolivia is on track to be the fastest growing country in the whole of Latin America this year
  • The manner in which children are getting better schooling
  • The communist conspiracy of giving retirement aged people a pension
  • The red-in-bed way of "helping pregnant mothers"
  • The way economic growth brings social stability (neocons: read&weep, dumbasses)
  • The absence of bad debts in Bolivia's macroeconomic make-up

So here's Garcia's piece. By the way, it's unlikely you've seen it before, because although it was a strong note on the Reuters newswire service, strangely and weirdly not a single open web service picked up on the note so strangely and weirdly it has managed to miss the eyes of those of us not equipped with a U$1,500/month Reuters terminal. It's almost as if they didn't want to you read it...strange'n'weird that, innit?

LA PAZ, Oct 1 (Reuters) - Bolivia's economy is healthy despite the global slump because leftist President Evo Morales is redistributing soaring state revenue as subsidies to the poor, the country's finance minister told Reuters on Thursday.

The Bolivian economy grew 3.2 percent in the first six months of this year, despite lower export income for natural gas, which is key to the Andean country's economy.

The International Monetary Fund says Bolivia is likely to post the highest growth in gross domestic product, in Latin America at 2.8 percent.

Finance Minister Luis Alberto Arce is even more optimistic. He expects GDP to grow 4 percent this year, largely because Morales has handed out money to the country's poor majority, which is boosting their spending.

"Our policy was to make the cake bigger for Bolivians with the nationalization policies, to increase state revenue. Our second policy was to divide the cake better in order to give more to those who have less," said Arce.

Arce said the subsidies are the "small engine of growth" that has allowed Bolivia's economy to grow despite lower export revenue caused by drops in demand and prices for natural gas.

Moody's Investors Service and Fitch Ratings upgraded Bolivia's credit ratings last month, citing the country's good macroeconomic performance.

But they noted that years of above-trend growth, the benefits of external debt forgiveness, limited foreign banking interests in the Andean nation and the absence of bad debts prevalent in developed markets helped Bolivia to avoid a direct fallout from the global crisis.

CASH FOR THE POOR
Morales, an Aymara Indian from a poor background who took office in 2006, has increased taxes on foreign investors and has nationalized energy, mining and telecommunications firms.

State revenue from the key natural gas sector boomed to $2.65 billion last year, from just over $1 billion in 2005, and revenue from the mining sector increased fourfold in the same period to $128.1 million.

The country's foreign reserves have rocketed to around $8.5 billion from $1.7 billion at the end of 2005.

Morales' government is spending some $320 million a year in grants to encourage parents to keep their children in school, in pensions for the elderly and in cash handouts to persuade pregnant women and mothers to go through health checks.

Earlier this year the government said that in 2008 nearly 2.4 million Bolivians received cash subsidies, roughly 25 percent of the country's population.

That is on top of the nearly $200 million donated by Morales' main Latin American ally, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, that Morales has spent in hundreds of small education, sports and health projects since 2006.

Although critics have said the government is giving subsidies to buy support from poor Bolivians, Arce says the stipends are a good way to redistribute wealth.

"These are policies to redistribute income ... tomorrow when the poor of today are no longer poor, of course we're going to have to stop giving this support," Arce said.

But the economist said that the government is likely to continue giving subsidies in the medium term because they stabilize the country.

"We can't stop ... because it's something that brings social stability. Social conflicts have decreased greatly with our government because we're solving the social problems that people have," Arce said.

Before Morales took office, three presidents in three years were forced to step down amid social unrest.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Top note on Peru from Reuters


HT to Justin Delacour at LANR for the headsup on this report from Terry Wade at Reuters. He nails the story here and even points out at the end that Bolivia will grow faster than Peru this year....that's pretty readical stuff for MSM right now, but it'll be getting more airtime as the year closes out, that's for sure.

Dudes, I've been telling you this all along but now it's getting some official, bigmedia airtime. Here below is how the Reuters story kick off, but click through for the rest as it's all good stuff. Meanwhile, for those of you versed in the language of Cervantes that want to get nittygritty on the latest numbers, this report from Farid Matuk is well worth your time. Meanwhile here we go with Reuters:

ANALYSIS-Peru's hopes of being an 'Asian tiger' fade

Less than a year ago, Peruvian elites smugly began calling their country a 'Latin tiger' and predicted that it had entered a magical phase of constant economic growth that would outshine the rest of Latin America.

A leading minerals exporter, it grew every year for the past decade and capped off the heady days of 2008 with a 10 percent surge as China bid up global metals prices. But this year, Peru will be lucky to expand at all. The slowdown has been sharper than forecast and exposed the country's overreliance on raw materials exports, with minerals making up 60 percent of all overseas sales. Unlike 'Asian tigers' such as South Korea and Taiwan, which boomed as they became manufacturers of everything from cars to microchips between the 1960s and 1990s, Peru's economy still largely depends on the cyclical whims of commodities prices and exports have plunged 30 percent since December. Most economists say Peru will grow less than 1.0 percent this year, and the government appears to be backing away from its downwardly revised forecast of 3.0 percent..............
CONTINUES HERE

Monday, June 22, 2009

Explaining basic concepts to financial journalists: Part One, the word "Growth"


Journalistic dumbassery surrounds us poor souls trying to sort the wheat from the chaff in LatAm, but it gets a bit tiresome when you even have to explain to local hacks what phrases like "trade growth" mean. Take for example this headline from Reuters about cocaine production in Bolivia, "Drug trade grows in Bolivia, Peru - U.N"

It comes from the UN report that Bolivia's cocaine production grew by an estimated 9% to stand at 113 metric tonnes (MT) in 2008. But what is conveniently forgotten by the gringo agenda-laden hacks is that production might have gone up 9MT but the amount of cocaine confiscated by drugs officers in Bolivia rose by 10.4MT to 28MT in the same period (winning praise from the UN in the very same report).

Soooooooooo....86MT of cocaine trade in 2007 and 85MT of cocaine trade in 2008...and Bolivia's cocaine trade "grew"?

Dumbasses

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Bagua: Good primer style note from Reuters

This link takes you to a good English language note from Reuters that lays out the basic issues of the Bagua massacre, what led up to it and the current situation in a fair, evenhanded way.

Recommended for those of you who don't want to spend your life on the subject but do want a good handle on what it's all about. Nice reporting, Marcos Aquino. Here's the link again, so there's no excuse not to link through.

UPDATE: Great job done by site friend UnTalLucas at his blog. He took photos of the "spontaneous" protest in front of the Nica Embassy today that has been getting media coverage. Jeesh, talk about rent-a-crowd...I love the one of the police officers leaning on their shields and looking bored to death. Go see for yourself.

Saturday, May 23, 2009

Peru's false GDP: no more crazy pills for Otto


Wow, to actually, finally read a report in the English language about the growing scandal around Peru's heavily massaged GDP numbers is incredibly refreshing, dudettes and dudes. There's now a small glimpse of sanity at the end of a long, dark tunnel. Check out the Reuters report below.

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Doubts grow about accuracy of Peru GDP numbers

LIMA, May 22 (Reuters) - Official statistics on economic growth in Peru may be too optimistic and painting a picture showing economic expansion when in fact the Andean country is in a recession, two Peruvian academics said.

Peru's statistics agency, the INEI, started working with a new methodology for calculating gross domestic product in 2007, and its results sharply diverge from the previous model.

Bruno Seminario, an economics professor at the Universidad del Pacifico in Lima who has taken current data and run them threw the old model, says Peru's economy is in fact shrinking at a time when President Alan Garcia says his country is largely sidestepping fallout from the global downturn.

"This change (to a new methodology) has generated so many distortions that nobody knows what's going on," Seminario told Reuters in an interview on Friday.

INEI director Renan Quispe, who declined to comment for this article but in the past has insisted he has "improved" the method for calculating GDP, has measured growth at 3.14 percent in January, 0.19 percent in February, and 3.05 percent in March using his new methodology.

But Seminario said that when the INEI's previous model is used, the numbers look much worse and show economic contraction of 0.51 percent, 1.38 percent, and 1.71 percent in each of the first three months of this year.

He said Peru is suffering a recession similar to the one it fell into after the 1997-8 Asian financial crisis, and that Peru's economy has ground to a halt after surging nearly 10 percent each of the last two years on a boom in commodities prices.

Seminario said the results produced by the new methodology the INEI is using are counterintuitive at a time when other indicators and countries that rely on commodities exports are suffering sharper declines.

The current slowdown has caused critics to take a closer look at official GDP numbers.

Economists also complain that the new methodology is a bit of a black box, wasn't subjected to a public comment period by independent statisticians before being introduced, and that the official results suggest a series of flimsy assumptions were put into the new model.

"Nobody's seen the survey or the deflators," Seminario said. "The only sensible thing to do is for the INEI to publish both series of numbers."

He isn't the only critic.

Farid Matuk, the former head of the INEI who was fired from his job after Garcia took office, has also written that he thinks the numbers are inflated.

He has even gone so far to say that the government has filed several lawsuits against him in retaliation for criticizing the GDP numbers.

Garcia's chief of staff, Yehude Simon, denied that the lawsuits were politically motivated, local radio reported on Friday.

Critics say the INEI is being imprudent by deriving some key numbers from estimates, instead of actual surveys.

Still other critics have compared Garcia's administration to the Kirchner governments in Argentina, which private economists have criticized for manipulating official statistics for political ends.

"The strategy to alter part of the measurement of GDP is misguided because the sectors 'other services,' commerce, construction, among others, are measured between the four walls of the INEI," Matuk has said.


Friday, May 22, 2009

A decent English Language report on the indigenous oil conflict

The Achuar of Peru. In 2005 Peru's health ministry found that 98% of Achuar living downstream from oil production camps had dangerously high levels of cadmium in their bloodstreams. Those living upstream from oil wells had normal levels. Sheer coincidence, y'know.

So there I was a couple of days ago lamenting that all MSM and newswires only tell the corporate government spin side of the story and miss out the indigenous viewpoint in the ongoing conflict over land and rights in the Amazon Basin. I'm now glad to eat my words and feature this Reuters report that just about hits the nail on the head on the issue. Well worth reading, so here it is.

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Peru's Garcia tussles with tribes over land rights

Thu May 21, 2009 3:43pm EDT

LIMA, May 21 (Reuters) - Peruvian President Alan Garcia's push to lure foreign investors to the Amazon basin has run into homegrown opposition, with indigenous leaders saying he has disregarded a U.N. declaration that protects their rights to control land and natural resources.

Thousands of indigenous people have protested in Peru's Amazon for much of the past 40 days, hoping to pressure Garcia to modify or strike down a series of laws he passed last year that encourage oil, mining and agricultural companies to invest billions of dollars in the mostly pristine region.

The protests, which have already shut Peru's pipeline that carries oil from the Amazon to the Pacific Ocean, underscore the risks of investing in a country with a poverty rate of 40 percent and a history of discord between wealthy elites in Lima and poor indigenous groups in the countryside.

"Peru isn't respecting the U.N. declaration on indigenous rights," Alberto Pizango, the leader of the protests and the head of a federation of indigenous and environmental groups called Aidesep, said on RPP radio on Thursday.

The declaration, which is non-binding, was passed in 2007 by 143 countries. Though Peru sponsored the declaration, indigenous leaders complain the government is ignoring their rights to decide how ancestral lands and natural resources are used.

Pizango has gone so far as to announce an "insurgency" in his push to have laws that Garcia passed thrown out.

On Thursday, after politicians complained he was being incendiary and moved to charge him with sedition, Pizango said: "To us, insurgency means defending our natural rights and peacefully resisting excesses committed by the Peruvian state."

"We recognize the government's constitutional legitimacy, but it doesn't understand indigenous issues," he said as he called for environmentally sustainable development.

PRESIDENT SAYS LAND IS FOR ALL PERUVIANS

Garcia decreed most of the laws in question last year using special powers Congress gave him to bring Peru's regulations into line with the requirements of its free-trade pact with the United States.

But critics say Garcia took advantage of the powers and passed laws that weren't required under the trade agreement.

Garcia's chief of staff, Yehude Simon, has pleaded with Pizango to hold a round of negotiations in the hopes of reaching a deal that would end blockades of roads and ports that have left jungle towns short of basic supplies.

Argentine energy company Pluspetrol has trimmed output in the Amazon because of the protests, and state energy company Petroperu has halted its crude oil pipeline.

So far Pizango has balked at negotiations, leaving Simon and his cabinet to try to hold talks with other indigenous leaders who have less clout.

The government has also dug in its heels. It has imposed a "state of emergency" rule, which allows it to send in troops to break up protests or impose curfews.

And it has refused to make a concrete offer to get rid of the controversial laws or give tribes more control over lands in an area that makes up 60 percent of the country's territory but has just 11 percent of its population.

Garcia, a former leftist who now fervently supports foreign investment, has sold dozens of concessions to foreign energy and mining companies since taking office in 2006. More auctions are planned in a country where mineral exports drive economic growth and the government is working to become self-sufficient in oil production.

"The lands of the Amazon belong ... to all Peruvians and not just a small group that lives there," Garcia said over the weekend. "The riches of Peru belong to all Peruvians."

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Peru's Sendero Terrorists just doubled their number


A nice report from Reuters today that has spotted the quiet way in which Peruvian army chiefs have quietly upped their estimations for the strength of the Sendero Luminoso (Shining Path) guerrilla/terrorist/narcotrafficking group (all labels seem to fit) to 600 from 300. This also fits in with the insightful mail received by IKN and re-printed in this post earlier this week.

Here's the Reuters note, so go read yourself. Here's the first part:

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LIMA, April 16 (Reuters) - Peru's military doubled its estimate for the size of the Shining Path guerrilla group to 600 on Thursday, after months of bloody ambushes in a coca-growing region that have killed at least 30 soldiers. The deaths have piled up since August, when the army launched an offensive to retake control of the coca-rich Ene and Apurimac valleys. It has since realized there were more rebels than it had thought. "This new estimate (of 600) is based on information we have received following attacks by the terrorists," Peru's joint chiefs of staff said.
CONTINUES HERE

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Tuesday, April 7, 2009

More evidence of a top in copper


1) At the CRU conference in Chile, Reuters had to search hard to find a bullish shiller or two. The report ends up with Ivanhoe's Friedland (a man with a "history of promotion", let's say diplomatically) and some non-entity from Petaquilla which is simply the worst mining company in Latin America (and that, dudettes and dudes, really takes some doing). If these are the only people Reuters could come up with for saying "buy copper" it doesn't bode well for spot Cu.

2) John Kaiser (who gets general approval Chez Otto...I don't subscribe but he's not a bad newsletter writer and importantly has a top reputation for honesty and integrity) just said the following (mailed over by reader DL 30 minutes ago...I don't know exactly when Kaiser published it).
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There is some suspicion that hedge funds have re-entered the "hard assets" arena, and quite a few market observers have issued sell recommendations for the copper sector on the premise that copper prices will soon develop a downtrend. Nickel prices have remained near the bottom of their recent range, and while zinc and lead have both crept higher, the gain is nowhere near as dramatic as in the case of copper.
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I do think that's fair comment even as I try my hardest to avoid the "blame the hedgies" approach.

3) SinkingAlpha starts publishing nobodies and their "buy copper" calls. This one really is a great contrary indicator, stopped clocks notwithstanding.

DYODD, and accuse me of searching for reasons to justify my own position as a short-term copper bear if you like. I am LT bullish on the stuff, by the way, but do believe it needs to retest lows in the next couple of months before it really moves up properly.

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Doe Run Peru: The truth will out

Reuters knocks one straight out the park. Here's the link and below is the story.

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Doe Run Peru faces renewed environmental criticism

Thu Mar 26, 2009 3:43pm EDT

LIMA, March 26 (Reuters) - With Doe Run Peru nearly shuttered amid sliding metals prices and tight credit, a Peruvian environmental group has released a new study saying the company dragged its feet on cleaning up the town around its smelter in La Oroya.

The company halted 95 percent of work this week at its sprawling plant after banks cut its credit lines, strangling its ability to buy concentrates.

The government is weighing whether to give Doe Run a $75 million bailout to save thousands of jobs. The government is also mulling whether to grant it an extension to meet terms of an environmental cleanup plan for La Oroya, long ranked as one of the world's most polluted cities.

"It's dirtier now than it was before," said Corey Laplante, a U.S. Fulbright scholar at the Peruvian Society for Environmental Law who led the study.

"If the government is going to give this bailout, it needs to attach a number of conditions: more transparent financial reporting, stronger public-participation mechanisms and stricter air-quality standards," he told Reuters.

Doe Run says it has been lowering emissions of polluting metals since it bought the smelter in 1997 from an old state-run company.

But Laplante says official data shows pollution has risen over a longer time frame, going back to 1995.

Using information from the Sindicato station that monitors lead in the air, Doe Run has said pollution fell 77 percent between 1997 and 2008.

Laplante says using 1997 as a baseline is misleading because pollution spiked that year, making pollution in subsequent years look low. When 1995 is used as the baseline, pollution at the station actually rose 6 percent through 2008, he said.

Victor Andres Belaunde, a Doe Run official, said data collected before 1997 may not be reliable, and the company cannot use data collected before it owned the smelter in its environmental compliance program.

When Doe Run bought the smelter -- which produces copper, zinc, lead and precious metals -- it was told it would need to spend little a more than $100 million to bring La Oroya into environmental compliance and solve a public health problem.

So far, Doe Run says it has spent $307 million, and that the total cost will end up being $500 million.

The compliance program still has not been completed. Initially, it was expected to take 10 years, but in 2006, the company got a three-year extension and now the government is being asked to grant another one.

Doe Run says the clean up job has turned out to be bigger than it thought.

Critics say it is stalling and that the company's owner, New York billionaire Ira Rennert of the Renco Group, has the money to accelerate the clean up.

But Peru has prohibited Rennert from taking profits out of Doe Run until the environmental program is complete. Now that work has halted at the plant, the future of a cleanup that was being financed by cashflows hangs in the balance.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

The Monterrico Torturers: Peru's Congress will lay the blame on the company


Ooh, lordy! Dana Ford at Reuters Lima has just filed a great note about the Monterrico torture case, and you can read it below. If, as seems to be the case, the blame is being settled on the heads of the privately contracted security company (now owned by Swiss group Securitas) by the Peruvian Congressional enquiry, this mean Monterrico (MNA.L) is well and truly on the hook for the things that took place inside its grounds in August 2005. As contractor, it is directly responsible for their actions, y'see.

Last time I looked MNA.L stock was trading at 44p or so in London. Take 40p or so away from that price in the very near future. Hey Bristow, you and your disgusting company are toast, you pig.

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Peru mining security firm faces investigation

By Dana Ford
LIMA, Feb 5 (Reuters) - A Peruvian security company that works for some major international mining firms faces a congressional investigation after human rights groups accused it of beating and abusing protesters in 2005 at a site it guarded.

Recently published photos of alleged beatings of protesters caused an uproar in Peru, a leading metals exporter, where remote mines guarded by private security firms are often targets for demonstrations over the social and environmental impacts of mining.

Last month, the National Coordinating Committee for Human Rights, a leading non-governmental rights group, published photographs of men and women allegedly beaten by guards and police after a 2005 protest at the Rio Blanco mining project.

The $1.4 billion development was protected by Forza, one of Peru's largest security companies.

"The photos clearly show that personnel of Forza played an active role in the repression and torture," said Javier Jahncke at Fedepaz, another rights group that joined the National Coordinating Committee in filing a complaint on the case.

The National Coordinating Committee said the photos were sent by an anonymous whistleblower. One shows a man bleeding from his neck and another shows the same man a day later, dead.

Peru's Congress said it would open an inquiry into whether crimes were committed by police and private security forces in response to a protest. Public prosecutors are already conducting their own investigation.

Forza's press office referred Reuters to Switzerland's Securitas which bought the Peruvian company in 2007, but an official there said Forza was in charge of handling inquiries. Reuters again contacted Forza, which declined to comment.

The images show protesters caked in blood, with hands tied behind their backs and plastic bags over their heads. A man in an orange vest with "Forza" printed on it poses in one shot, holding a gun and staring at the camera.

The mining project is owned by Monterrico Metals , which was bought by China's Zijin in 2007.

Monterrico's investor relations manager, Andrew Bristow, was not available for comment. But when the photographs first emerged, he said the allegations were the latest in a long list of "opposition activity" meant to derail the project.

Forza, whose clients also include major energy firms, has been investigated on a similar complaint once before, but the government dropped the case due to a lack of evidence.

Police work is underfunded in Peru and nearly nonexistent in remote areas where foreign mining companies work.

Private firms fill the void, often hiring current or former police and military personnel. Rights groups say they go beyond the law in enforcing security.

"Where there are no police, private security companies act like the police," said Jahncke "In many cases, they push past the limit of what is legal."

Peru has 92,000 police officers and 100,000 people who work in private security, according to a 2008 United Nations study.

Ricardo Ganiku Furugen, who heads the government agency that oversees private security firms, said he is waiting for public prosecutors to finish their investigation before deciding on whether to revoke Forza's work permit.

"The final report will come to us and we will see then if the situation demands cancellation of the contract," he said. (Editing by Fiona Ortiz and Kieran Murray)
dana.ford@thomsonreuters.com;
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Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Ecuador and Codelco? Not this one again.........

It was around mid-2008 that your ear-to-the-ground Otto first heard about Codelco sniffing around Ecuador. The real reason was that Chile's State-run copper company (that also happens to be the world's biggest single producer of the stuff) was advising the Studmuffin gov't about what it could do to move its large copper projects forward. Those projects are headed up by Corriente Resources (CTQ.to) (ETQ) at Mirador and then a bunch of potential greenfields dotted around the area.

Coldelco's advisory role made (and still makes) a lot of sense and for sure the guys from Chile would have knocked some of the basics about copper mining into the heads of the Ecuador mining ministry dudes, but as day follows night the unfounded rumours soon started about how Codelco was moving into Ecuador, how Codelco was in line to buy out CTQ, how Codelco would be fast-tracking Ecuador into a a bright and shiny copper-coloured future.

It was all bullshit, of course. But today we had a new chapter as Reuters filed this report about how Ecuador wants to go JV with Codelco on its copper projects. We get quotes from the Vice-Minister of Mines José Serrano and all the shebang. All of which, again, being as likely to transpire as Hugo Chávez declaring his homosexuality on CNN tonight.

Let's see the wood for the trees here. Firstly, Codelco has never repeat never operated outside of Chile. Not once. Not a since ounce of copper, not a feasibility study, not a nothing. Second, the swandive drop in industrial metals means there is a large oversupply now in Chile, not just in working mines that were looking to expand but also with greenfields/brownfields that were being investigated by Codelco and its satellite companies with the view to grooming them for ramping to production. There isn't a single reason why Codelco should or would get involved with another project in another country right now.

Next, José Serrano is a dick. He's been the main cheerleader and has spun all the lines to media in the last 12 months and has been....let's say....overoptimistic on many occasions (especially about timelines while the mining moratorium was in place). The dude Serrano can wish and want all he likes. A link-up with Codelco might make good copy inside Ecuador for a while but it just ain't gonna happen, period. Chile no wanty Ecuador copper. Chile got mucho mucho already.

More likely is the sudden realization over at the mining ministry that copper is now selling at less than half the price of last year and their prized copper projects aren't so interesting any more. It sounds to me as if Serrano is using some uber-naive notion to try and winkle a definitive deal out of the Chinese (because be in little doubt, tis the Chinese that will buy CTQ and develop Mirador).

Finally, it's doubtful that Reuter's best reporter in Ecuador, Alonso Soto, would have filed such a toe-the-party-line, mediocre, one-sided report without finding out the other side(s) of the story. This is one of the problems with the standard of journalism down here; the difference between good and bad coverage isn't at an editorial level but at a reporter level. This story by Alexandra Valencia looks like it was filed with the minimum of fact-checking and fuss. Maybe one day I'll write a post giving my veeeeery subjective, biased and unfair list of "which reporter to read" for each country down here, but for the time being I'll stick with Ecuador and say that Soto (at Reuters) and Stefan Kueffner (at Bloomie) are good names to look for at the byline.

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

This year's APEC meeting might get pretty explosive

Via Reuters and not one but three people writing in (thanks to you all), here's a very interesting story that hit the wires today. It seems as though the left-wing terrorist group Sendero Luminoso (Shining Path) are making a bit of a comeback unfortunately, as on Monday this week 50 of the band took over a outcamp of Peru mining and smelting company Doe Run in the Andean foothills East of Lima. After giving them a long lecture of the ills of the world and how they're right about everything, Sendero stole a bunch of stuff including antibiotics, a radio and, spookily, a whole shitload of dynamite.

Why is this spooky? Well, as Reuters rightly points out, dynamite was one of the weapon of choice amongst SL members back in the 1980s and 90s. And then there's the little matter of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit coming to Peru this year and starting on November 20th. This is a big, big protocol event, and at least 20 heads of state are due to visit Peru including those of Russia, Japan, Australia and all the Americas (including a dude called Bush who'll be making his final trip as prez).

Expect....how can I say this?...tight security. Like "tight" as in "a sparrow farts within 500 paces and it gets arrested".

Keep on rockin' da free world, people.

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

Venezuela Oil: Incakola leads, the rest follow

Fresh Juice Served Here


Still getting your LatAm news from the newswires? How very 1990's of you..........
Still waiting for overpaid analysts to speak before making your mind up? Oh, how passé......

It seems the LatAm movers, shakers and powers-that-be read this humble corner of cyberspace. On Sunday and Monday, your on-the-ball Otto explained why (contrary to popular opinion), Venezuela wasn't in any immediate trouble from the North's financial meltdown and oil prices where they are will suffice. Today, Reuters finally gets round to telling the world their own version of the story which is....well....it's the same.

Here's the link to Brian Ellworth's analysis report, and putting the silly snark aside I have to say he's done a good job, found the right people to quote and got it just about right imho (except getting that old chestnut about devaluation in there...that's nonsense). Some extracts:

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Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez will likely emerge unscathed from the current global financial contagion even if tumbling crude prices force the oil-dependent OPEC nation to scale back spending in the coming months.......

"They're going to have to tone down the usual expenditure programs, but it's obviously not an emergency situation," said Enrique Alvarez, head of Latin American debt strategy with financial research group IDEAGlobal..........

....And the nation's economy will not collapse overnight -- even if the credit crisis drastically reduces oil prices........

.....a fall in oil prices below $80 per barrel would give Chavez less money for social programs and trim down the nation's robust current account surplus. "But Chavez has ample financial public assets to draw from even in the event of a sustained oil price fall,"

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So go read the whole Reuters article and then check back at my posts from earlier this week; you'll see it's the same argument and then (almost certainly) marvel at how prescient Otto really is. Do IDEAGlobal and Eurasia Group read Incakola news? Maybe someone there writes Incakola news? YOU BE THE JUDGE!

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Thursday, September 18, 2008

Bolivia: Applause for Reuters

Credit where credit is due. Amongst the total dross reporting of mainstream media outlets, the coverage offered by Reuters over the events in Bolivia has been the shining exception. In this latest report, Reuters man-on-the-spot Eduardo Garcia (a man injured in a car accident in Bolivia last year that killed one of his colleagues) neatly captures what's really been happening and slaps down the ridiculously poor analysis offered by CNN, AP, Bloomberg and all the others in recent days.

Reuters LatAm deserves applause for the great job it's done in Bolivia. A far cry from the work of other newswires recently mentioned.

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Bolivia's Morales emerges stronger from crisis

By Eduardo Garcia - analysis

LA PAZ (Reuters) - Bolivia's first indigenous president, leftist Evo Morales, has deftly handled a violent political crisis and appears strengthened as he heads into talks with opposition governors who resist his socialist reforms.

At least 17 people were killed last week as anti-Morales protesters stormed government buildings, sabotaged natural gas pipelines and battled with the president's supporters in four opposition-controlled regions.

He ordered martial law in the remote Amazon province of Pando and arrested the governor there, accusing him of ordering a massacre of peasants last Thursday.

But soldiers showed restraint, taking a hands-off approach at times to avert confrontation. And South American presidents strongly backed Morales at an emergency summit this week, condemning any coup attempts or separatist rebellions CONTINUES HERE