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Argentine MPs approved a bill early Thursday promoted by President Javier Milei that authorises mining in ecologically sensitive areas of glaciers and permafrost, and has outraged environmentalists.

The amendment to the so-called Glacier Law, which was already approved by the Senate in February, would make it easier to mine for metals such as copper, lithium and silver in frozen parts of the Andes mountains.

The Chamber of Deputies, Argentina’s lower house of Congress, approved the amendment with 137 votes in favor, 111 against and three abstenations after nearly 12 hours of debate. The law takes effect once it is published in ‌the official gazette.

Environmentalists say the reforms will weaken protections for crucial water sources. 

Thousands of people took part in a demonstration on Wednesday afternoon outside parliament, marked by isolated skirmishes with police.

Some held aloft banners with slogans such as “Water is more precious than gold!” and “A glacier destroyed cannot be restored!”

Watch moreOn thin ice: Argentina’s melting glaciers, a symbol of climate change

Seven Greenpeace activists were arrested earlier in the day after scaling a statue outside parliament and unfurling a banner urging lawmakers “not to betray the Argentine people”. 

The passage of the amendment is a new coup for Milei, who pushed through looser labor laws in February despite repeated street protests.

Nicolas Mayoraz, an MP from Milei’s ruling La Libertad Avanza party, assured lawmakers that combining “environmental protection and sustainable development is possible”.

Environmental activist Flavia Broffoni rubbished the government’s position.

“The science is clear…there is absolutely no possibility of creating what they (the government) call a ‘sustainable mine’ in a periglacial environment,” she said after addressing the protest outside parliament.

Lithium race

There are nearly 17,000 glaciers or rock glaciers – a mix of rock and ice – in Argentina, according to a 2018 inventory.

In the northwest of the country, where mining activity is concentrated, glacial reserves have shrunk by 17 percent in the last decade, mainly due to climate change, according to the Argentine Institute of Snow Science, Glaciology and Environmental Sciences.

Milei, a free-market radical who does not believe in man-made climate change, argues the bill is necessary to attract large-scale mining projects.

Argentina is a major producer of lithium, which is critical to the global tech and green energy sectors.

The Central Bank has estimated, based on industry forecasts, that the country could triple its mining exports by 2030.

“Environmentalists would rather see us starve than have anything touched,” Milei has argued. 

Supporters of the reform argue that it will clear up ambiguities in the current law, from 2010, on which periglacial areas – areas on the edges of glaciers – can be economically developed.

“We want legal certainty, we want clear definitions,” Michael Meding, director of the Los Azules copper mining project in San Juan, told AFP. 

Enrique Viale, president of the Argentine Association of Environmental Lawyers, said that the reform threatened the water supply of “70 percent” of Argentine people.

Under the current law, a scientific body designates protected glaciers and periglacial environments.

The reform would give individual provinces more powers to decide which areas need protection and which can be exploited for economic purposes.

It has been backed by the governors of northern Andean provinces with strong mining sectors, namely Mendoza, San Juan, Catamarca and Salta.

(FRANCE 24 with AFP and Reuters)

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Article:

Argentine MPs approved a bill early Thursday promoted by President Javier Milei that authorises mining in ecologically sensitive areas of glaciers and permafrost, and has outraged environmentalists.

The amendment to the so-called Glacier Law, which was already approved by the Senate in February, would make it easier to mine for metals such as copper, lithium and silver in frozen parts of the Andes mountains.

The Chamber of Deputies, Argentina’s lower house of Congress, approved the amendment with 137 votes in favor, 111 against and three abstenations after nearly 12 hours of debate. The law takes effect once it is published in ‌the official gazette.

Environmentalists say the reforms will weaken protections for crucial water sources. 

Thousands of people took part in a demonstration on Wednesday afternoon outside parliament, marked by isolated skirmishes with police.

Some held aloft banners with slogans such as “Water is more precious than gold!” and “A glacier destroyed cannot be restored!”

Watch moreOn thin ice: Argentina’s melting glaciers, a symbol of climate change

Seven Greenpeace activists were arrested earlier in the day after scaling a statue outside parliament and unfurling a banner urging lawmakers “not to betray the Argentine people”. 

The passage of the amendment is a new coup for Milei, who pushed through looser labor laws in February despite repeated street protests.

Nicolas Mayoraz, an MP from Milei’s ruling La Libertad Avanza party, assured lawmakers that combining “environmental protection and sustainable development is possible”.

Environmental activist Flavia Broffoni rubbished the government’s position.

“The science is clear…there is absolutely no possibility of creating what they (the government) call a ‘sustainable mine’ in a periglacial environment,” she said after addressing the protest outside parliament.


Lithium race

There are nearly 17,000 glaciers or rock glaciers – a mix of rock and ice – in Argentina, according to a 2018 inventory.

In the northwest of the country, where mining activity is concentrated, glacial reserves have shrunk by 17 percent in the last decade, mainly due to climate change, according to the Argentine Institute of Snow Science, Glaciology and Environmental Sciences.

Milei, a free-market radical who does not believe in man-made climate change, argues the bill is necessary to attract large-scale mining projects.

Argentina is a major producer of lithium, which is critical to the global tech and green energy sectors.

The Central Bank has estimated, based on industry forecasts, that the country could triple its mining exports by 2030.

“Environmentalists would rather see us starve than have anything touched,” Milei has argued. 

Supporters of the reform argue that it will clear up ambiguities in the current law, from 2010, on which periglacial areas – areas on the edges of glaciers – can be economically developed.

“We want legal certainty, we want clear definitions,” Michael Meding, director of the Los Azules copper mining project in San Juan, told AFP. 

Enrique Viale, president of the Argentine Association of Environmental Lawyers, said that the reform threatened the water supply of “70 percent” of Argentine people.

Under the current law, a scientific body designates protected glaciers and periglacial environments.

The reform would give individual provinces more powers to decide which areas need protection and which can be exploited for economic purposes.

It has been backed by the governors of northern Andean provinces with strong mining sectors, namely Mendoza, San Juan, Catamarca and Salta.

(FRANCE 24 with AFP and Reuters)

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First responders stand amid rubble at the site of an Israeli airstrike in Beirut's Corniche al-Mazraa neighbourhood.
First responders stand amid rubble at the site of an Israeli airstrike in Beirut’s Corniche al-Mazraa neighbourhood © AFP

The fragile truce between Iran and the United States entered its second day on Thursday, with Tehran threatening to resume hostilities as Israel launched a major bombardment of Lebanon. Follow our liveblog for the latest developments.

 

Iran announces alternative Hormuz routes

Iran announced alternative routes on Thursday for ships travelling through the Strait of Hormuz, citing the risk of sea mines in the main zone of the vital waterway.

The statement shared instructions for an alternative entry and exit route through the strait.

Japan’s Nikkei retreats as US-Iran ceasefire optimism fades

Japan’s Nikkei ​share average retreated on Thursday after a sharp rally in the ​previous session, as initial euphoria over a two-week fragile ceasefire in the Middle East gave way to a more cautious market outlook.

Investor ​sentiment ‌weakened after Israel launched its heaviest strikes ⁠yet on Lebanon on Wednesday, killing hundreds of people and prompting threats of ‌retaliation from Iran. Tehran also signalled it would be “unreasonable” to ⁠continue negotiations for a permanent peace deal with the United States.

The Nikkei was down 0.3% at 56,125.02, ​as of 0045 GMT on Thursday, and on ‌track to snap a fourth-session rally, if the current trend persists.

Hezbollah says fired rockets towards Israel in response to ‘violation of ceasefire’

Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah said Thursday it had fired rockets towards Israel in response to its “violation” of the US-Iran truce. 

It came a day after the Lebanese group said it has a “right” to respond to a deadly wave of Israeli strikes across Lebanon.

“In response to the enemy’s violation of the ceasefire agreement,” Hezbollah targeted the Israeli kibbutz of Manara near the border with Lebanon “with a rocket barrage” early Thursday, Hezbollah said in a statement.

Ceasefire is threatened as Israel expands Lebanon strikes and Iran closes strait again

A ceasefire deal to pause the war in Iran appeared to hang by a thread Wednesday after the Islamic Republic closed the Strait of Hormuz again in response to Israeli attacks in Lebanon. The White House demanded that the channel be reopened and sought to keep peace talks on track.

The US and Iran both claimed victory after reaching the agreement, and world leaders expressed relief, even as more drones and missiles hit Iran and Gulf Arab countries. At the same time, Israel intensified its attacks on the Hezbollah militant group in Lebanon, hitting commercial and residential areas in Beirut. At least 182 people were killed Wednesday in the deadliest day of fighting there.

The fresh violence threatened to scuttle what US Vice President JD Vance called a “fragile” deal.

  • French President Emmanuel Macron said Wednesday that he urged his US and Iranian counterparts, Donald Trump and Masoud Pezeshkian, to include Lebanon in the ceasefire reached with Iran.
  • Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian said that a Lebanon ceasefire was one of the key conditions of the Islamic Republic’s 10-point plan for securing an end to the Middle East war, the ISNA news agency reported Wednesday.
  • Vice ​President ​JD Vance on Wednesday said ​Tehran’s ‌negotiators ⁠thought ‌the US-Iran ceasefire agreed ⁠to on Tuesday included ​Lebanon, ‌but the US had ‌in fact ​not agreed to that.

(FRANCE 24 with AFP, Reuters and AP)

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The Church of England is expected to make a formal apology for its role in forced adoptions and the UK’s mother and baby home scandal.

Survivors of the scandal – in which hundreds of thousands of children were forcibly separated from their mothers – have welcomed the news after years of campaigning for recognition.

The church ran and was linked to scores of institutions across the country where unmarried pregnant women were sent to have babies in secret in the postwar era before the infants were handed over to married couples, who in some cases had made donations to “moral welfare” organisations involved.

Anglican mother and baby homes were part of a network of properties nationwide, including homes run by the Catholic church and the Salvation Army, which worked alongside statutory agencies. Women and children faced abuse and neglect in the system, but the Westminster government has never formally apologised for its role.

The BBC reports that an “early draft” of an apology from the Church of England said: “We acknowledge the lifelong impact of these experiences and the part the church played in a system shaped by attitudes and behaviours that we now recognise as harmful. For the pain and trauma experienced – and still carried – by many women and children in church-affiliated mother and baby homes, we are deeply sorry”.

A 2021 parliamentary inquiry found there were 185,000 adoptions involving unmarried mothers in England and Wales between 1949 and 1973 alone and that the state was ultimately responsible for the suffering caused by public institutions and employees involved.

Because the last mother and baby homes closed in the late 1980s and records are incomplete, campaigners say many more people were affected.

Phil Frampton, a writer and campaigner from Manchester, was born in an Anglican institution in 1953 because his parents had been in a mixed heritage relationship. His Nigerian father, a mining engineering researcher, was removed from the country after it became known, while his white British mother, a grammar school teacher from Birmingham, was sent to the Rosemundy mother and baby home in St Agnes, Cornwall.

Frampton said: “A lot of survivors will be delighted. What’s coming is a big victory after all the campaigning people have done over the last 20 years – providing that the wording is not mealy-mouthed and designed to protect the church. It will not be good enough for the church to say they were guided by the morality of they time – they were supposed to set the morality of the time and they did that by their actions.

“The church and state were the principal supporters of forced adoptions and they should be compensating all the survivors for the hell they put them through. If the church is fully open on this, under the new archbishop of Canterbury, then this is part of the pressure on the UK government to apologise. The UK is way behind in making an apology and providing access to records for survivors to find their children and parents, to bring closure and new beginnings.”

Research by Dr Michael Lambert of Lancaster University has indicated the use of the lactation-suppressing drug diethylstilbestrol, which has been linked to an increased risk of cancers, in some unmarried mothers’ homes, while an ITV investigation has revealed unmarked graves across England contain the bodies of babies who did not survive.

Giving evidence to the education select committee last month, the children and families minister, Josh MacAlister, acknowledged that the UK state “had a role” in historical forced adoptions and said the case for a formal apology was “being actively considered”.

The governments of Ireland, Scotland and Wales have all previously issued apologies, as have the Salvation Army and the head of the Catholic church in England and Wales.

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