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  1. 📰 How to Handle Embarrassment: Lessons from Yano-kun’s Ordinary Days

    In the anime series 'Yano-kun’s Ordinary Days', there's a relatable scene where a character attempts to act smoothly, only to find themselves under the watchful eyes of the entire class. This moment captures the essence of teenage awkwardness and the...

    🔗 Read more: animenewsdaily.us/articles/435

    #AnimeNews #CRUNCHYROLL #Yano-kun’sOrdinaryDays

  2. 📰 How to Handle Embarrassment: Lessons from Yano-kun’s Ordinary Days

    In the anime series 'Yano-kun’s Ordinary Days', there's a relatable scene where a character attempts to act smoothly, only to find themselves under the watchful eyes of the entire class. This moment captures the essence of teenage awkwardness and the...

    🔗 Read more: animenewsdaily.us/articles/435

    #AnimeNews #CRUNCHYROLL #Yano-kun’sOrdinaryDays

  3. 📰 FANTASTICS' Yusei Yagi Joins 'Yano-kun's Ordinary Days' Anime in a Unique Cameo

    In a remarkable blend of J-pop and anime, Yusei Yagi from the renowned group FANTASTICS has made a special guest appearance in the anime 'Yano-kun's Ordinary Days.' Yagi plays himself in this exciting crossover, seamlessly integrating his real-world ...

    🔗 Read more: animenewsdaily.us/articles/432

    #AnimeNews #CRUNCHYROLL #Yano-kun'sOrdinaryDays

  4. 📰 FANTASTICS' Yusei Yagi Joins 'Yano-kun's Ordinary Days' Anime in a Unique Cameo

    In a remarkable blend of J-pop and anime, Yusei Yagi from the renowned group FANTASTICS has made a special guest appearance in the anime 'Yano-kun's Ordinary Days.' Yagi plays himself in this exciting crossover, seamlessly integrating his real-world ...

    🔗 Read more: animenewsdaily.us/articles/432

    #AnimeNews #CRUNCHYROLL #Yano-kun'sOrdinaryDays

  5. 📰 iScream Unveils Music Video for 'Yano-kun's Ordinary Days' Anime Ending Theme

    The music group iScream has thrilled anime enthusiasts with the release of the music video for the ending theme of the anime series 'Yano-kun's Ordinary Days.' This captivating video accompanies a serene and heartfelt track that beautifully wraps up ...

    🔗 Read more: animenewsdaily.us/articles/417

    #AnimeNews #CRUNCHYROLL #Yano-kun'sOrdinaryDays

  6. 📰 New Trailer Released for 'Yano-kun's Ordinary Days' Anime: Cast and Theme Song Revealed

    Fans of romantic comedy anime have something to cheer about with the release of a new trailer for 'Yano-kun's Ordinary Days.' This highly anticipated series offers a glimpse into the delightful chaos of high school life through the eyes of Tsuyoshi Y...

    🔗 Read more: animenewsdaily.us/articles/405

    #AnimeNews #CRUNCHYROLL #Yano-kun'sOrdinaryDays

  7. Just learned that my forthcoming #AngelIsland #YANovel is a "Gold Standard Selection" of the #JuniorLibraryGuild, an organization that curates #KidLit books for libraries.

  8. Just learned that my forthcoming #AngelIsland #YANovel is a "Gold Standard Selection" of the #JuniorLibraryGuild, an organization that curates #KidLit books for libraries.

  9. 10 photos: “The Majestic” mural by Yanoe and Zoueh in Tulsa, Oklahoma

    Street Artists Yanoe and Zoueh “The Majestic” mural by Yanoe and Zoueh in Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA. Photos by Chop ‘em Down Films. Comments: (1/2) 10 photos: https://t.co/hEsgpeXcWI “The Majestic” mural by Yanoe and Zoueh in Tulsa, Oklahoma pic.twitter.com/LKvVqObYGn— STREET ART UTOPIA: New Street Art and Graffiti (@traintoutopia) January 19, 2022

    streetartutopia.com/2022/01/19

  10. 13 Reasons To Boycott Gold for Yanomami

    Hunger for Gold in the Global North is fueling a living hell in the Global South. Here are 13 reasons to #BoycottGold4Yanomami. Take action every time you shop! Say no to gold and #BoycottGold!

    Hunger for #gold in the Global North is fueling a living hell for #Indigenous people in the Global South. Here’s reasons why you should #BoycottGold4Yanomami #Yanomami #SayNoToGold @barbaranavarro 🥇🧐🔥☠️🚫@palmoildetect https://palmoildetectives.com/2021/12/07/here-are-13-reasons-why-you-should-boycottgold4yanomami/

    Share to BlueSky Share to Twitter

    Behind the insatiable appetite for #gold is a dark secret of money laundering, illegal #mining, environmental #ecocide and human misery. Make sure you #BoycottGold4Yanomami when you shop! 🥇☠️🔥🚜🧐❌#Boycott4Wildlife @BarbaraNavarro @palmoildetect https://palmoildetectives.com/2021/12/07/here-are-13-reasons-why-you-should-boycottgold4yanomami/

    Share to BlueSky Share to Twitter

    1. Gold mining = greenwashing of crime and corruption

    2. Even the world’s biggest gold-importing nations don’t properly monitor the origins of their gold

    3. Laundering crimes using gold is easy

    4. Gold is a legal version of cocaine

    5. Gold mining causes massive deforestation

    6. Indigenous people have no rights

    7. Brazil’s racist President, Bolsonaro allows land-grabbing to continue

    8. Indigenous women and children are forced into sex slavery

    9. Violence and murder in gold mining is common

    10. Mercury kills ecosystems, people and animals

    11. Ecosystems rarely recover from the damage – they are dead

    12. Jewellery and electronics companies and criminals are the only ones who benefit from gold

    13. Over a million children are forced to work in gold mines

    How can I help?

    1. Gold mining = greenwashing of crime and corruption

    Image: Shutterstock

    Back to top ↑

    Just like in every other extractive industry in the developing world, palm oil, fossil fuels, gold mining goes hand-in-hand with greenwashing

    https://twitter.com/Dragofix/status/1442168669891670017?s=20

    https://twitter.com/BarbaraNavarro/status/1465648549371289602?s=20

    https://twitter.com/GOLDCOUNCIL/status/1465719200333373448?s=20

    https://twitter.com/jobeckerhrw/status/976929269346656257?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E976929269346656257%7Ctwgr%5E%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fpalmoildetectivez.wordpress.com%2F%3Fp%3D12558preview%3Dtrue

    2. Even the world’s biggest gold-importing nations don’t properly monitor the origins of their gold

    Image: ‘llegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    Back to top ↑

    Switzerland, one of the world’s biggest gold-buying nations has weak and pathetic policies for monitoring the origin of gold

    The message is loud and clear: the current system to prevent the importation and refining in Switzerland of illegal gold has been found lacking. The country’s financial watchdog reports that Customs data is not sufficiently transparent to differentiate between mined gold, bank gold and recycled gold, all of which are imported under the same code (HS 710812). This absence of identification means bars of dubious origin can easily slip through the net. The report also pinpoints inadequate legislation, compounded by underwhelming penalties: at worst, a CHF 2,000 fine.

    Switzerland bottom of the class for gold due diligence’, Christophe Roulet, FHH Journal

    3. Laundering crimes using gold is easy

    Image: ‘llegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    Back to top ↑

    Corruption and laundering gold is simple and easy

    Since there is no way to measure whether any given land could feasibly produce the reported amount of gold, illegal miners can co-opt owners of illegal permits to ‘wash’ gold for a fee – estimated by the public prosecutor’s office at 10% of the value of the gold transaction

    ‘Procedural Limitations of Monitoring and Tracking the Illegal Mining Process in the Brazilian Amazon’ (2021)

    In 2020, banks flagged $514.9bn suspicious transactions involving gold companies.


    FinCEN Files investigations into the gold trade from around the world. Kyra Guerny, International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, 2020.

    If there’s a crackdown in Peru, you just smuggle the gold across the border to Chile. Or if there’s a crackdown all across Latin America, then you can simply sell your gold through the Emirates, where there are very few controls. It’s a very difficult industry to completely eliminate the opportunities for money laundering, because it’s so global and you can just keep shifting your business.

    ‘‘Dirty Gold’ chases ‘three amigos’ from Miami to Peru and beyond’:
    International Consortium of Investigative Journalists

    Image: ‘llegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    4. Gold is a legal version of cocaine

    Image: ‘llegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    Back to top ↑

    For drug cartels in South America: Gold is just like a legitimate, legal version of cocaine

    “Criminal groups make so much more money from gold than from cocaine, and it’s so much easier

    Ivan Díaz Corzo, a former member of Colombia’s anti-criminal-mining task force. ‘How drug lords make billions smuggling gold to Miami for your jewelry and phones‘. Miami Herald, 2018.

    Drug-cartel associates posing as precious-metals traders buy and mine gold in Latin America. Cocaine profits are their seed money. They sell the metal through front companies — hiding its criminal taint — to refineries in the United States and other major gold-buying nations like Switzerland and the United Arab Emirates.

    Once the deal is made, the cocaine kingpins have successfully turned their dirty gold into clean cash. To the outside world, they’re not drug dealers anymore; they’re gold traders. That’s money laundering.

    ‘How drug lords make billions smuggling gold to Miami for your jewelry and phones‘. Miami Herald, 2018.

    5. Gold mining causes massive deforestation

    Back to top ↑

    Mining in Indigenous territories of the Amazon is responsible for 23% of deforestation, up from 4% in 2017

    “Over the past decade, illegal mining incursions — mostly small-scale gold extraction operations — have increased fivefold on Indigenous lands and threefold in other protected areas of Brazil”

    ‘Illegal mining in the Amazon hits record high amid Indigenous protests’, Jeff Tollerson, Nature 2021.

    “The Amazon Rainforest does not burn by itself. Behind every fire that is lit is corporate greed, like agribusiness. And behind them are the largest banks and corporations in the world. They are the ones who profit from this destruction. They profit from every centimeter of land invaded, from every tree cut and burned. In the flames, they see money.”

    Sônia Guajajara, executive director of the Association of Brazil’s Indigenous Peoples (APIB).

    6. Indigenous Yanomami have no rights to their land

    Image: ‘llegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    Back to top ↑

    Venezuela’s illegitimate Maduro regime has rolled back Indigenous rights to stop Yanomami from protesting against gold mining

    Venezuela’s constitution recognises its indigenous populations, yet their rights are trampled by the illegitimate Maduro criminal regime. The land is also occupied by armed Colombian groups and others working for the Maduro regime, which seeks to profit from selling the illegally mined minerals.

    ‘Under Maduro regime, indigenous people suffer’, Noelani Kirschner, Share America, 2020.

    7. Brazil’s racist President, Bolsonaro allows land-grabbing from indigenous people

    Image: Transparency International

    Back to top ↑

    Far Right president Jair Bolsonaro’s racist policies in Brazil call for an increase in gold mining, palm oil and cattle grazing and the ‘integration’ of Indigenous people

    More than 15% of the national territory is demarcated as indigenous land and quilombolas. Less than a million people live in these truly isolated places in Brazil, exploited and manipulated by NGOs. Let’s together integrate these citizens and value all Brazilians.

    Jair Bolsonaro

    https://twitter.com/jairbolsonaro/status/1080468589298229253?s=20

    “We are experiencing an emergency to defend indigenous lives and our territories. We need the world to know this, and to do its part. Indigenous land: not an inch less. Indigenous blood: not a single drop more.”

    Sônia Guajajara, executive director of the Association of Brazil’s Indigenous Peoples (APIB).

    8. Indigenous women and children are forced into sex slavery

    Back to top ↑

    Sex trafficking is common by women and children, as indigenous people’s traditional means of survival on the land is taken from them

    The scale of sex trafficking and paedophilia around illegal gold mines in parts of Latin America is staggering. Thousands of people working there fall prey to labor exploitation by organised crime groups, simply because they have to survive. Girls as young as 12 working in the brothels and bars around illegal gold mines.

    Sex trafficking ‘staggering’ in illegal Latin American gold mines: researchers’ By Anastasia Moloney, Thomson Reuters Foundation, 2016.
    Image: Barbara Crane Navarro

    Mining regions in the rainforest have become epicenters of human trafficking, disease and environmental destruction, according to government officials and human rights investigators. Miners are forced into slavery. Prostitutes set up camps near the miners, fueling the spread of sexually transmitted infections. One human rights group found that 2,000 sex workers, 60 percent of them children, were employed in a single mining area in Peru. Meanwhile, strip mining and the indiscriminate use of mercury to ferret out gold are turning swaths of the world’s most biodiverse ecosystems into a nightmarish moonscape. In 2016, Peru declared a temporary state of emergency over widespread mercury poisoning in Madre de Dios, a jungle province rife with illegal mining. Nearly four in five adults in the area’s capital city tested positive for dangerous levels of mercury…”

    Barbara Navarro

    9. Violence and murder in gold mining is common

    Back to top ↑

    Gold miners are controlled by fear of having their fingers cut off or of being executed

    The illegitimate Maduro regime both controls the illegal gold mining and turns a blind eye to environmental and human rights abuses. Human Rights Watch report collected testimonials from Venezuelan gold miners. The report revealed that miners are kept under tight control by syndicates of armed criminals, such as the guerilla organisation FARC, also known as the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, and the ELN, also known as the National Liberation Army. If miners or other members of the public are caught stealing they have their fingers publicly cut off or are killed.

    ‘Venezuela: Violent Abuses in Illegal Gold Mines’, Human Rights Watch, 2020.

    10. Mercury used in gold mining kills ecosystems, people and animals

    Back to top ↑

    Deadly mercury is used to extract gold out of the sludge. This poisons and kills everything in its path

    Firstly, water cannons blast away river banks. After this, toxic mercury is used by miners to extract gold from the sediment. After the process, the dumping of mercury contaminates the soil and seeps into the air and water. This permanently destroys the water table, dispersing mercury 100’s of miles away, contaminating fishing stocks, animals and humans. Both people and animals in gold mining regions have high levels of mercury present in their bodies, leading to chronic illnesses and problems with brain function.

    ‘The New Gold Rush’, Wake Forest University, 2018.

    Infographic: Illegal Gold Mining Chain Peru by Insight Crime

    11. Ecosystems rarely recover from the damage – they are dead

    Back to top ↑

    “Gold mining significantly limits the regrowth of Amazonian forests, and greatly reduces their ability to accumulate carbon. Recovery rates on abandoned mining pits and tailing ponds were among the lowest ever recorded for tropical forests, compared to recovery from agriculture and pasture.”

    Gold mining leaves deforested Amazon land barren for years, find scientists’ The Conversation, July 1, 2020.
    A typical mining site. Even five years after the mine has closed, there is still barely any vegetation. Michelle Kalamandeen, Author provided

    12. Jewellery and electronics companies and criminals are the only ones who benefit from gold

    Image: ‘lllegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    Back to top ↑

    Venezuelan gold from Yanomami territories is laundered and ends up in global brands of jewellery and electronics

    An investigation of mercury trafficking networks in the Amazon reveals how Venezuelan gold is laundered into legitimate supply chains and could end up in products made by the world’s biggest corporations.

    Image: ‘lllegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    The tainted gold leaves the refineries in glittering bars stamped with their logos, and is sold to international corporations that incorporate the precious metal in our phones, computers, cars, and other technologies.

    Mercury: Chasing the Quicksilver by InfoAmazonia

    13. More than a million children work in gold mining around the world

    Image: Survival

    Back to top ↑

    There are more than 1 million children working in goldmines around the world. Some of this gold ends up in our mobile telephones. This is the conclusion of the study conducted by SOMO Centre for Research in recent months, which was commissioned by Stop Child Labour.

    Every year, the electronics industry uses 279,000 kg of gold with a value of more than 10 billion euros. Making it the third largest buyer of gold after the jewellery industry and the financial sector. Even though nearly all electronics companies state that they do not accept child labour, they are almost doing nothing to actively eradicate child labour in goldmines.

    Gold, Child Labour and Electronics

    How can I help?

    Image: ‘lllegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    Back to top ↑

    Here’s some actions you can take every day to stop the corruption, destruction and human rights abuses associated with gold mining.

    1. Raise your voice online for the Yanomami using the hashtag #BoycottGold4Yanomami

    Share this article along with many articles by Indigenous Activist Barbara Crane Navarro about this issue on social media using the hashtag #BoycottGold4Yanomami

    Image: Barbara Crane Navarro

    2. Stop buying gold jewellery and investing in gold

    Put your money where your mouth is and don’t support this corrupt and evil industry.

    3. Buy vintage second-hand gold jewellery – don’t buy new gold

    This makes a unique and special gift for the one you love. It also does not require more mining to get the gold jewellery. This is the ONLY form of sustainable gold jewellery.

    Image: ‘lllegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    4. Don’t fall for the luxury advertising of jewellery brands like Chopard, Tiffany&Co, Cartier, Bvlgari etc.

    Don’t be a sucker for luxury. Remember the reality of what gold and diamond mining is doing to the natural world and to Indigenous people.

    Image: ‘lllegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    5. Fix and repair old mobile phones and laptops rather than buying new ones containing gold

    This can be hard with the planned obsolescence of a lot of technology (in other words the short lifespan). However all we can do is do our best. Also you can pressure tech brands to make their goods more long-lasting and repairable and cite this as a critical reason why their industry is corrupt, greedy and needs to change.

    Image: ‘lllegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    6. Support Indigenous Rights NGOs that actually stop landgrabbing in the Amazon, Africa and elsewhere like Articulation of Indigenous Peoples of Brazil (APIB)

    APIB recently successfully took the Brazilian government and Bolsonaro to court for ecocide and deforestation. Avoid supporting NGO’s that do very little other than virtue-signalling, like Survival.

    Support APIB

    6. Follow Barbara Crane Navarro on Twitter and WordPress

    She has spent decades fighting for the Yanomami people.

    Images: Barbara Crane Navarro

    Back to top ↑

    #Artivism #BarbaraCraneNavarro #BoycottGold #BoycottGold4Yanomami #brandBoycotts #Brazil #collectiveAction #corruption #deforestation #ecocide #extinction #gold #goldMining #indigenous #IndigenousActivism #indigenousRights #mines #mining #SayNoToGold #Venezuela #Yanomami
  11. 13 Reasons To Boycott Gold for Yanomami

    Hunger for Gold in the Global North is fueling a living hell in the Global South. Here are 13 reasons to #BoycottGold4Yanomami. Take action every time you shop! Say no to gold and #BoycottGold!

    Hunger for #gold in the Global North is fueling a living hell for #Indigenous people in the Global South. Here’s reasons why you should #BoycottGold4Yanomami #Yanomami #SayNoToGold @barbaranavarro 🥇🧐🔥☠️🚫@palmoildetect https://palmoildetectives.com/2021/12/07/here-are-13-reasons-why-you-should-boycottgold4yanomami/

    Share to BlueSky Share to Twitter

    Behind the insatiable appetite for #gold is a dark secret of money laundering, illegal #mining, environmental #ecocide and human misery. Make sure you #BoycottGold4Yanomami when you shop! 🥇☠️🔥🚜🧐❌#Boycott4Wildlife @BarbaraNavarro @palmoildetect https://palmoildetectives.com/2021/12/07/here-are-13-reasons-why-you-should-boycottgold4yanomami/

    Share to BlueSky Share to Twitter

    1. Gold mining = greenwashing of crime and corruption

    2. Even the world’s biggest gold-importing nations don’t properly monitor the origins of their gold

    3. Laundering crimes using gold is easy

    4. Gold is a legal version of cocaine

    5. Gold mining causes massive deforestation

    6. Indigenous people have no rights

    7. Brazil’s racist President, Bolsonaro allows land-grabbing to continue

    8. Indigenous women and children are forced into sex slavery

    9. Violence and murder in gold mining is common

    10. Mercury kills ecosystems, people and animals

    11. Ecosystems rarely recover from the damage – they are dead

    12. Jewellery and electronics companies and criminals are the only ones who benefit from gold

    13. Over a million children are forced to work in gold mines

    How can I help?

    1. Gold mining = greenwashing of crime and corruption

    Image: Shutterstock

    Back to top ↑

    Just like in every other extractive industry in the developing world, palm oil, fossil fuels, gold mining goes hand-in-hand with greenwashing

    https://twitter.com/Dragofix/status/1442168669891670017?s=20

    https://twitter.com/BarbaraNavarro/status/1465648549371289602?s=20

    https://twitter.com/GOLDCOUNCIL/status/1465719200333373448?s=20

    https://twitter.com/jobeckerhrw/status/976929269346656257?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E976929269346656257%7Ctwgr%5E%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fpalmoildetectivez.wordpress.com%2F%3Fp%3D12558preview%3Dtrue

    2. Even the world’s biggest gold-importing nations don’t properly monitor the origins of their gold

    Image: ‘llegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    Back to top ↑

    Switzerland, one of the world’s biggest gold-buying nations has weak and pathetic policies for monitoring the origin of gold

    The message is loud and clear: the current system to prevent the importation and refining in Switzerland of illegal gold has been found lacking. The country’s financial watchdog reports that Customs data is not sufficiently transparent to differentiate between mined gold, bank gold and recycled gold, all of which are imported under the same code (HS 710812). This absence of identification means bars of dubious origin can easily slip through the net. The report also pinpoints inadequate legislation, compounded by underwhelming penalties: at worst, a CHF 2,000 fine.

    Switzerland bottom of the class for gold due diligence’, Christophe Roulet, FHH Journal

    3. Laundering crimes using gold is easy

    Image: ‘llegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    Back to top ↑

    Corruption and laundering gold is simple and easy

    Since there is no way to measure whether any given land could feasibly produce the reported amount of gold, illegal miners can co-opt owners of illegal permits to ‘wash’ gold for a fee – estimated by the public prosecutor’s office at 10% of the value of the gold transaction

    ‘Procedural Limitations of Monitoring and Tracking the Illegal Mining Process in the Brazilian Amazon’ (2021)

    In 2020, banks flagged $514.9bn suspicious transactions involving gold companies.


    FinCEN Files investigations into the gold trade from around the world. Kyra Guerny, International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, 2020.

    If there’s a crackdown in Peru, you just smuggle the gold across the border to Chile. Or if there’s a crackdown all across Latin America, then you can simply sell your gold through the Emirates, where there are very few controls. It’s a very difficult industry to completely eliminate the opportunities for money laundering, because it’s so global and you can just keep shifting your business.

    ‘‘Dirty Gold’ chases ‘three amigos’ from Miami to Peru and beyond’:
    International Consortium of Investigative Journalists

    Image: ‘llegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    4. Gold is a legal version of cocaine

    Image: ‘llegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    Back to top ↑

    For drug cartels in South America: Gold is just like a legitimate, legal version of cocaine

    “Criminal groups make so much more money from gold than from cocaine, and it’s so much easier

    Ivan Díaz Corzo, a former member of Colombia’s anti-criminal-mining task force. ‘How drug lords make billions smuggling gold to Miami for your jewelry and phones‘. Miami Herald, 2018.

    Drug-cartel associates posing as precious-metals traders buy and mine gold in Latin America. Cocaine profits are their seed money. They sell the metal through front companies — hiding its criminal taint — to refineries in the United States and other major gold-buying nations like Switzerland and the United Arab Emirates.

    Once the deal is made, the cocaine kingpins have successfully turned their dirty gold into clean cash. To the outside world, they’re not drug dealers anymore; they’re gold traders. That’s money laundering.

    ‘How drug lords make billions smuggling gold to Miami for your jewelry and phones‘. Miami Herald, 2018.

    5. Gold mining causes massive deforestation

    Back to top ↑

    Mining in Indigenous territories of the Amazon is responsible for 23% of deforestation, up from 4% in 2017

    “Over the past decade, illegal mining incursions — mostly small-scale gold extraction operations — have increased fivefold on Indigenous lands and threefold in other protected areas of Brazil”

    ‘Illegal mining in the Amazon hits record high amid Indigenous protests’, Jeff Tollerson, Nature 2021.

    “The Amazon Rainforest does not burn by itself. Behind every fire that is lit is corporate greed, like agribusiness. And behind them are the largest banks and corporations in the world. They are the ones who profit from this destruction. They profit from every centimeter of land invaded, from every tree cut and burned. In the flames, they see money.”

    Sônia Guajajara, executive director of the Association of Brazil’s Indigenous Peoples (APIB).

    6. Indigenous Yanomami have no rights to their land

    Image: ‘llegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    Back to top ↑

    Venezuela’s illegitimate Maduro regime has rolled back Indigenous rights to stop Yanomami from protesting against gold mining

    Venezuela’s constitution recognises its indigenous populations, yet their rights are trampled by the illegitimate Maduro criminal regime. The land is also occupied by armed Colombian groups and others working for the Maduro regime, which seeks to profit from selling the illegally mined minerals.

    ‘Under Maduro regime, indigenous people suffer’, Noelani Kirschner, Share America, 2020.

    7. Brazil’s racist President, Bolsonaro allows land-grabbing from indigenous people

    Image: Transparency International

    Back to top ↑

    Far Right president Jair Bolsonaro’s racist policies in Brazil call for an increase in gold mining, palm oil and cattle grazing and the ‘integration’ of Indigenous people

    More than 15% of the national territory is demarcated as indigenous land and quilombolas. Less than a million people live in these truly isolated places in Brazil, exploited and manipulated by NGOs. Let’s together integrate these citizens and value all Brazilians.

    Jair Bolsonaro

    https://twitter.com/jairbolsonaro/status/1080468589298229253?s=20

    “We are experiencing an emergency to defend indigenous lives and our territories. We need the world to know this, and to do its part. Indigenous land: not an inch less. Indigenous blood: not a single drop more.”

    Sônia Guajajara, executive director of the Association of Brazil’s Indigenous Peoples (APIB).

    8. Indigenous women and children are forced into sex slavery

    Back to top ↑

    Sex trafficking is common by women and children, as indigenous people’s traditional means of survival on the land is taken from them

    The scale of sex trafficking and paedophilia around illegal gold mines in parts of Latin America is staggering. Thousands of people working there fall prey to labor exploitation by organised crime groups, simply because they have to survive. Girls as young as 12 working in the brothels and bars around illegal gold mines.

    Sex trafficking ‘staggering’ in illegal Latin American gold mines: researchers’ By Anastasia Moloney, Thomson Reuters Foundation, 2016.

    Image: Barbara Crane Navarro

    Mining regions in the rainforest have become epicenters of human trafficking, disease and environmental destruction, according to government officials and human rights investigators. Miners are forced into slavery. Prostitutes set up camps near the miners, fueling the spread of sexually transmitted infections. One human rights group found that 2,000 sex workers, 60 percent of them children, were employed in a single mining area in Peru. Meanwhile, strip mining and the indiscriminate use of mercury to ferret out gold are turning swaths of the world’s most biodiverse ecosystems into a nightmarish moonscape. In 2016, Peru declared a temporary state of emergency over widespread mercury poisoning in Madre de Dios, a jungle province rife with illegal mining. Nearly four in five adults in the area’s capital city tested positive for dangerous levels of mercury…”

    Barbara Navarro

    9. Violence and murder in gold mining is common

    Back to top ↑

    Gold miners are controlled by fear of having their fingers cut off or of being executed

    The illegitimate Maduro regime both controls the illegal gold mining and turns a blind eye to environmental and human rights abuses. Human Rights Watch report collected testimonials from Venezuelan gold miners. The report revealed that miners are kept under tight control by syndicates of armed criminals, such as the guerilla organisation FARC, also known as the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, and the ELN, also known as the National Liberation Army. If miners or other members of the public are caught stealing they have their fingers publicly cut off or are killed.

    ‘Venezuela: Violent Abuses in Illegal Gold Mines’, Human Rights Watch, 2020.

    10. Mercury used in gold mining kills ecosystems, people and animals

    Back to top ↑

    Deadly mercury is used to extract gold out of the sludge. This poisons and kills everything in its path

    Firstly, water cannons blast away river banks. After this, toxic mercury is used by miners to extract gold from the sediment. After the process, the dumping of mercury contaminates the soil and seeps into the air and water. This permanently destroys the water table, dispersing mercury 100’s of miles away, contaminating fishing stocks, animals and humans. Both people and animals in gold mining regions have high levels of mercury present in their bodies, leading to chronic illnesses and problems with brain function.

    ‘The New Gold Rush’, Wake Forest University, 2018.

    Infographic: Illegal Gold Mining Chain Peru by Insight Crime

    11. Ecosystems rarely recover from the damage – they are dead

    Back to top ↑

    “Gold mining significantly limits the regrowth of Amazonian forests, and greatly reduces their ability to accumulate carbon. Recovery rates on abandoned mining pits and tailing ponds were among the lowest ever recorded for tropical forests, compared to recovery from agriculture and pasture.”

    Gold mining leaves deforested Amazon land barren for years, find scientists’ The Conversation, July 1, 2020.

    A typical mining site. Even five years after the mine has closed, there is still barely any vegetation. Michelle Kalamandeen, Author provided

    12. Jewellery and electronics companies and criminals are the only ones who benefit from gold

    Image: ‘lllegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    Back to top ↑

    Venezuelan gold from Yanomami territories is laundered and ends up in global brands of jewellery and electronics

    An investigation of mercury trafficking networks in the Amazon reveals how Venezuelan gold is laundered into legitimate supply chains and could end up in products made by the world’s biggest corporations.

    Image: ‘lllegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    The tainted gold leaves the refineries in glittering bars stamped with their logos, and is sold to international corporations that incorporate the precious metal in our phones, computers, cars, and other technologies.

    Mercury: Chasing the Quicksilver by InfoAmazonia

    13. More than a million children work in gold mining around the world

    Image: Survival

    Back to top ↑

    There are more than 1 million children working in goldmines around the world. Some of this gold ends up in our mobile telephones. This is the conclusion of the study conducted by SOMO Centre for Research in recent months, which was commissioned by Stop Child Labour.

    Every year, the electronics industry uses 279,000 kg of gold with a value of more than 10 billion euros. Making it the third largest buyer of gold after the jewellery industry and the financial sector. Even though nearly all electronics companies state that they do not accept child labour, they are almost doing nothing to actively eradicate child labour in goldmines.

    Gold, Child Labour and Electronics

    How can I help?

    Image: ‘lllegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    Back to top ↑

    Here’s some actions you can take every day to stop the corruption, destruction and human rights abuses associated with gold mining.

    1. Raise your voice online for the Yanomami using the hashtag #BoycottGold4Yanomami

    Share this article along with many articles by Indigenous Activist Barbara Crane Navarro about this issue on social media using the hashtag #BoycottGold4Yanomami

    Image: Barbara Crane Navarro

    2. Stop buying gold jewellery and investing in gold

    Put your money where your mouth is and don’t support this corrupt and evil industry.

    3. Buy vintage second-hand gold jewellery – don’t buy new gold

    This makes a unique and special gift for the one you love. It also does not require more mining to get the gold jewellery. This is the ONLY form of sustainable gold jewellery.

    Image: ‘lllegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    4. Don’t fall for the luxury advertising of jewellery brands like Chopard, Tiffany&Co, Cartier, Bvlgari etc.

    Don’t be a sucker for luxury. Remember the reality of what gold and diamond mining is doing to the natural world and to Indigenous people.

    Image: ‘lllegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    5. Fix and repair old mobile phones and laptops rather than buying new ones containing gold

    This can be hard with the planned obsolescence of a lot of technology (in other words the short lifespan). However all we can do is do our best. Also you can pressure tech brands to make their goods more long-lasting and repairable and cite this as a critical reason why their industry is corrupt, greedy and needs to change.

    Image: ‘lllegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    6. Support Indigenous Rights NGOs that actually stop landgrabbing in the Amazon, Africa and elsewhere like Articulation of Indigenous Peoples of Brazil (APIB)

    APIB recently successfully took the Brazilian government and Bolsonaro to court for ecocide and deforestation. Avoid supporting NGO’s that do very little other than virtue-signalling, like Survival.

    Support APIB

    6. Follow Barbara Crane Navarro on Twitter and WordPress

    She has spent decades fighting for the Yanomami people.

    Images: Barbara Crane Navarro

    Back to top ↑

    #Artivism #BarbaraCraneNavarro #BoycottGold #BoycottGold4Yanomami #brandBoycotts #Brazil #collectiveAction #corruption #deforestation #ecocide #extinction #gold #goldMining #indigenous #IndigenousActivism #indigenousRights #mines #mining #SayNoToGold #Venezuela #Yanomami

  12. 13 Reasons To Boycott Gold for Yanomami

    Hunger for Gold in the Global North is fueling a living hell in the Global South. Here are 13 reasons to #BoycottGold4Yanomami. Take action every time you shop! Say no to gold and #BoycottGold!

    Hunger for #gold in the Global North is fueling a living hell for #Indigenous people in the Global South. Here’s reasons why you should #BoycottGold4Yanomami #Yanomami #SayNoToGold @barbaranavarro 🥇🧐🔥☠️🚫@palmoildetect https://palmoildetectives.com/2021/12/07/here-are-13-reasons-why-you-should-boycottgold4yanomami/

    Share to BlueSky Share to Twitter

    Behind the insatiable appetite for #gold is a dark secret of money laundering, illegal #mining, environmental #ecocide and human misery. Make sure you #BoycottGold4Yanomami when you shop! 🥇☠️🔥🚜🧐❌#Boycott4Wildlife @BarbaraNavarro @palmoildetect https://palmoildetectives.com/2021/12/07/here-are-13-reasons-why-you-should-boycottgold4yanomami/

    Share to BlueSky Share to Twitter

    1. Gold mining = greenwashing of crime and corruption

    2. Even the world’s biggest gold-importing nations don’t properly monitor the origins of their gold

    3. Laundering crimes using gold is easy

    4. Gold is a legal version of cocaine

    5. Gold mining causes massive deforestation

    6. Indigenous people have no rights

    7. Brazil’s racist President, Bolsonaro allows land-grabbing to continue

    8. Indigenous women and children are forced into sex slavery

    9. Violence and murder in gold mining is common

    10. Mercury kills ecosystems, people and animals

    11. Ecosystems rarely recover from the damage – they are dead

    12. Jewellery and electronics companies and criminals are the only ones who benefit from gold

    13. Over a million children are forced to work in gold mines

    How can I help?

    1. Gold mining = greenwashing of crime and corruption

    Image: Shutterstock

    Back to top ↑

    Just like in every other extractive industry in the developing world, palm oil, fossil fuels, gold mining goes hand-in-hand with greenwashing

    https://twitter.com/Dragofix/status/1442168669891670017?s=20

    https://twitter.com/BarbaraNavarro/status/1465648549371289602?s=20

    https://twitter.com/GOLDCOUNCIL/status/1465719200333373448?s=20

    https://twitter.com/jobeckerhrw/status/976929269346656257?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E976929269346656257%7Ctwgr%5E%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fpalmoildetectivez.wordpress.com%2F%3Fp%3D12558preview%3Dtrue

    2. Even the world’s biggest gold-importing nations don’t properly monitor the origins of their gold

    Image: ‘llegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    Back to top ↑

    Switzerland, one of the world’s biggest gold-buying nations has weak and pathetic policies for monitoring the origin of gold

    The message is loud and clear: the current system to prevent the importation and refining in Switzerland of illegal gold has been found lacking. The country’s financial watchdog reports that Customs data is not sufficiently transparent to differentiate between mined gold, bank gold and recycled gold, all of which are imported under the same code (HS 710812). This absence of identification means bars of dubious origin can easily slip through the net. The report also pinpoints inadequate legislation, compounded by underwhelming penalties: at worst, a CHF 2,000 fine.

    Switzerland bottom of the class for gold due diligence’, Christophe Roulet, FHH Journal

    3. Laundering crimes using gold is easy

    Image: ‘llegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    Back to top ↑

    Corruption and laundering gold is simple and easy

    Since there is no way to measure whether any given land could feasibly produce the reported amount of gold, illegal miners can co-opt owners of illegal permits to ‘wash’ gold for a fee – estimated by the public prosecutor’s office at 10% of the value of the gold transaction

    ‘Procedural Limitations of Monitoring and Tracking the Illegal Mining Process in the Brazilian Amazon’ (2021)

    In 2020, banks flagged $514.9bn suspicious transactions involving gold companies.


    FinCEN Files investigations into the gold trade from around the world. Kyra Guerny, International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, 2020.

    If there’s a crackdown in Peru, you just smuggle the gold across the border to Chile. Or if there’s a crackdown all across Latin America, then you can simply sell your gold through the Emirates, where there are very few controls. It’s a very difficult industry to completely eliminate the opportunities for money laundering, because it’s so global and you can just keep shifting your business.

    ‘‘Dirty Gold’ chases ‘three amigos’ from Miami to Peru and beyond’:
    International Consortium of Investigative Journalists

    Image: ‘llegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    4. Gold is a legal version of cocaine

    Image: ‘llegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    Back to top ↑

    For drug cartels in South America: Gold is just like a legitimate, legal version of cocaine

    “Criminal groups make so much more money from gold than from cocaine, and it’s so much easier

    Ivan Díaz Corzo, a former member of Colombia’s anti-criminal-mining task force. ‘How drug lords make billions smuggling gold to Miami for your jewelry and phones‘. Miami Herald, 2018.

    Drug-cartel associates posing as precious-metals traders buy and mine gold in Latin America. Cocaine profits are their seed money. They sell the metal through front companies — hiding its criminal taint — to refineries in the United States and other major gold-buying nations like Switzerland and the United Arab Emirates.

    Once the deal is made, the cocaine kingpins have successfully turned their dirty gold into clean cash. To the outside world, they’re not drug dealers anymore; they’re gold traders. That’s money laundering.

    ‘How drug lords make billions smuggling gold to Miami for your jewelry and phones‘. Miami Herald, 2018.

    5. Gold mining causes massive deforestation

    Back to top ↑

    Mining in Indigenous territories of the Amazon is responsible for 23% of deforestation, up from 4% in 2017

    “Over the past decade, illegal mining incursions — mostly small-scale gold extraction operations — have increased fivefold on Indigenous lands and threefold in other protected areas of Brazil”

    ‘Illegal mining in the Amazon hits record high amid Indigenous protests’, Jeff Tollerson, Nature 2021.

    “The Amazon Rainforest does not burn by itself. Behind every fire that is lit is corporate greed, like agribusiness. And behind them are the largest banks and corporations in the world. They are the ones who profit from this destruction. They profit from every centimeter of land invaded, from every tree cut and burned. In the flames, they see money.”

    Sônia Guajajara, executive director of the Association of Brazil’s Indigenous Peoples (APIB).

    6. Indigenous Yanomami have no rights to their land

    Image: ‘llegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    Back to top ↑

    Venezuela’s illegitimate Maduro regime has rolled back Indigenous rights to stop Yanomami from protesting against gold mining

    Venezuela’s constitution recognises its indigenous populations, yet their rights are trampled by the illegitimate Maduro criminal regime. The land is also occupied by armed Colombian groups and others working for the Maduro regime, which seeks to profit from selling the illegally mined minerals.

    ‘Under Maduro regime, indigenous people suffer’, Noelani Kirschner, Share America, 2020.

    7. Brazil’s racist President, Bolsonaro allows land-grabbing from indigenous people

    Image: Transparency International

    Back to top ↑

    Far Right president Jair Bolsonaro’s racist policies in Brazil call for an increase in gold mining, palm oil and cattle grazing and the ‘integration’ of Indigenous people

    More than 15% of the national territory is demarcated as indigenous land and quilombolas. Less than a million people live in these truly isolated places in Brazil, exploited and manipulated by NGOs. Let’s together integrate these citizens and value all Brazilians.

    Jair Bolsonaro

    https://twitter.com/jairbolsonaro/status/1080468589298229253?s=20

    “We are experiencing an emergency to defend indigenous lives and our territories. We need the world to know this, and to do its part. Indigenous land: not an inch less. Indigenous blood: not a single drop more.”

    Sônia Guajajara, executive director of the Association of Brazil’s Indigenous Peoples (APIB).

    8. Indigenous women and children are forced into sex slavery

    Back to top ↑

    Sex trafficking is common by women and children, as indigenous people’s traditional means of survival on the land is taken from them

    The scale of sex trafficking and paedophilia around illegal gold mines in parts of Latin America is staggering. Thousands of people working there fall prey to labor exploitation by organised crime groups, simply because they have to survive. Girls as young as 12 working in the brothels and bars around illegal gold mines.

    Sex trafficking ‘staggering’ in illegal Latin American gold mines: researchers’ By Anastasia Moloney, Thomson Reuters Foundation, 2016.
    Image: Barbara Crane Navarro

    Mining regions in the rainforest have become epicenters of human trafficking, disease and environmental destruction, according to government officials and human rights investigators. Miners are forced into slavery. Prostitutes set up camps near the miners, fueling the spread of sexually transmitted infections. One human rights group found that 2,000 sex workers, 60 percent of them children, were employed in a single mining area in Peru. Meanwhile, strip mining and the indiscriminate use of mercury to ferret out gold are turning swaths of the world’s most biodiverse ecosystems into a nightmarish moonscape. In 2016, Peru declared a temporary state of emergency over widespread mercury poisoning in Madre de Dios, a jungle province rife with illegal mining. Nearly four in five adults in the area’s capital city tested positive for dangerous levels of mercury…”

    Barbara Navarro

    9. Violence and murder in gold mining is common

    Back to top ↑

    Gold miners are controlled by fear of having their fingers cut off or of being executed

    The illegitimate Maduro regime both controls the illegal gold mining and turns a blind eye to environmental and human rights abuses. Human Rights Watch report collected testimonials from Venezuelan gold miners. The report revealed that miners are kept under tight control by syndicates of armed criminals, such as the guerilla organisation FARC, also known as the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, and the ELN, also known as the National Liberation Army. If miners or other members of the public are caught stealing they have their fingers publicly cut off or are killed.

    ‘Venezuela: Violent Abuses in Illegal Gold Mines’, Human Rights Watch, 2020.

    10. Mercury used in gold mining kills ecosystems, people and animals

    Back to top ↑

    Deadly mercury is used to extract gold out of the sludge. This poisons and kills everything in its path

    Firstly, water cannons blast away river banks. After this, toxic mercury is used by miners to extract gold from the sediment. After the process, the dumping of mercury contaminates the soil and seeps into the air and water. This permanently destroys the water table, dispersing mercury 100’s of miles away, contaminating fishing stocks, animals and humans. Both people and animals in gold mining regions have high levels of mercury present in their bodies, leading to chronic illnesses and problems with brain function.

    ‘The New Gold Rush’, Wake Forest University, 2018.

    Infographic: Illegal Gold Mining Chain Peru by Insight Crime

    11. Ecosystems rarely recover from the damage – they are dead

    Back to top ↑

    “Gold mining significantly limits the regrowth of Amazonian forests, and greatly reduces their ability to accumulate carbon. Recovery rates on abandoned mining pits and tailing ponds were among the lowest ever recorded for tropical forests, compared to recovery from agriculture and pasture.”

    Gold mining leaves deforested Amazon land barren for years, find scientists’ The Conversation, July 1, 2020.
    A typical mining site. Even five years after the mine has closed, there is still barely any vegetation. Michelle Kalamandeen, Author provided

    12. Jewellery and electronics companies and criminals are the only ones who benefit from gold

    Image: ‘lllegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    Back to top ↑

    Venezuelan gold from Yanomami territories is laundered and ends up in global brands of jewellery and electronics

    An investigation of mercury trafficking networks in the Amazon reveals how Venezuelan gold is laundered into legitimate supply chains and could end up in products made by the world’s biggest corporations.

    Image: ‘lllegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    The tainted gold leaves the refineries in glittering bars stamped with their logos, and is sold to international corporations that incorporate the precious metal in our phones, computers, cars, and other technologies.

    Mercury: Chasing the Quicksilver by InfoAmazonia

    13. More than a million children work in gold mining around the world

    Image: Survival

    Back to top ↑

    There are more than 1 million children working in goldmines around the world. Some of this gold ends up in our mobile telephones. This is the conclusion of the study conducted by SOMO Centre for Research in recent months, which was commissioned by Stop Child Labour.

    Every year, the electronics industry uses 279,000 kg of gold with a value of more than 10 billion euros. Making it the third largest buyer of gold after the jewellery industry and the financial sector. Even though nearly all electronics companies state that they do not accept child labour, they are almost doing nothing to actively eradicate child labour in goldmines.

    Gold, Child Labour and Electronics

    How can I help?

    Image: ‘lllegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    Back to top ↑

    Here’s some actions you can take every day to stop the corruption, destruction and human rights abuses associated with gold mining.

    1. Raise your voice online for the Yanomami using the hashtag #BoycottGold4Yanomami

    Share this article along with many articles by Indigenous Activist Barbara Crane Navarro about this issue on social media using the hashtag #BoycottGold4Yanomami

    Image: Barbara Crane Navarro

    2. Stop buying gold jewellery and investing in gold

    Put your money where your mouth is and don’t support this corrupt and evil industry.

    3. Buy vintage second-hand gold jewellery – don’t buy new gold

    This makes a unique and special gift for the one you love. It also does not require more mining to get the gold jewellery. This is the ONLY form of sustainable gold jewellery.

    Image: ‘lllegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    4. Don’t fall for the luxury advertising of jewellery brands like Chopard, Tiffany&Co, Cartier, Bvlgari etc.

    Don’t be a sucker for luxury. Remember the reality of what gold and diamond mining is doing to the natural world and to Indigenous people.

    Image: ‘lllegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    5. Fix and repair old mobile phones and laptops rather than buying new ones containing gold

    This can be hard with the planned obsolescence of a lot of technology (in other words the short lifespan). However all we can do is do our best. Also you can pressure tech brands to make their goods more long-lasting and repairable and cite this as a critical reason why their industry is corrupt, greedy and needs to change.

    Image: ‘lllegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    6. Support Indigenous Rights NGOs that actually stop landgrabbing in the Amazon, Africa and elsewhere like Articulation of Indigenous Peoples of Brazil (APIB)

    APIB recently successfully took the Brazilian government and Bolsonaro to court for ecocide and deforestation. Avoid supporting NGO’s that do very little other than virtue-signalling, like Survival.

    Support APIB

    6. Follow Barbara Crane Navarro on Twitter and WordPress

    She has spent decades fighting for the Yanomami people.

    Images: Barbara Crane Navarro

    Back to top ↑

    #Artivism #BarbaraCraneNavarro #BoycottGold #BoycottGold4Yanomami #brandBoycotts #Brazil #collectiveAction #corruption #deforestation #ecocide #extinction #gold #goldMining #indigenous #IndigenousActivism #indigenousRights #mines #mining #SayNoToGold #Venezuela #Yanomami
  13. 13 Reasons To Boycott Gold for Yanomami

    Hunger for Gold in the Global North is fueling a living hell in the Global South. Here are 13 reasons to #BoycottGold4Yanomami. Take action every time you shop! Say no to gold and #BoycottGold!

    Hunger for #gold in the Global North is fueling a living hell for #Indigenous people in the Global South. Here’s reasons why you should #BoycottGold4Yanomami #Yanomami #SayNoToGold @barbaranavarro 🥇🧐🔥☠️🚫@palmoildetect https://palmoildetectives.com/2021/12/07/here-are-13-reasons-why-you-should-boycottgold4yanomami/

    Share to BlueSky Share to Twitter

    Behind the insatiable appetite for #gold is a dark secret of money laundering, illegal #mining, environmental #ecocide and human misery. Make sure you #BoycottGold4Yanomami when you shop! 🥇☠️🔥🚜🧐❌#Boycott4Wildlife @BarbaraNavarro @palmoildetect https://palmoildetectives.com/2021/12/07/here-are-13-reasons-why-you-should-boycottgold4yanomami/

    Share to BlueSky Share to Twitter

    1. Gold mining = greenwashing of crime and corruption

    2. Even the world’s biggest gold-importing nations don’t properly monitor the origins of their gold

    3. Laundering crimes using gold is easy

    4. Gold is a legal version of cocaine

    5. Gold mining causes massive deforestation

    6. Indigenous people have no rights

    7. Brazil’s racist President, Bolsonaro allows land-grabbing to continue

    8. Indigenous women and children are forced into sex slavery

    9. Violence and murder in gold mining is common

    10. Mercury kills ecosystems, people and animals

    11. Ecosystems rarely recover from the damage – they are dead

    12. Jewellery and electronics companies and criminals are the only ones who benefit from gold

    13. Over a million children are forced to work in gold mines

    How can I help?

    1. Gold mining = greenwashing of crime and corruption

    Image: Shutterstock

    Back to top ↑

    Just like in every other extractive industry in the developing world, palm oil, fossil fuels, gold mining goes hand-in-hand with greenwashing

    https://twitter.com/Dragofix/status/1442168669891670017?s=20

    https://twitter.com/BarbaraNavarro/status/1465648549371289602?s=20

    https://twitter.com/GOLDCOUNCIL/status/1465719200333373448?s=20

    https://twitter.com/jobeckerhrw/status/976929269346656257?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E976929269346656257%7Ctwgr%5E%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fpalmoildetectivez.wordpress.com%2F%3Fp%3D12558preview%3Dtrue

    2. Even the world’s biggest gold-importing nations don’t properly monitor the origins of their gold

    Image: ‘llegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    Back to top ↑

    Switzerland, one of the world’s biggest gold-buying nations has weak and pathetic policies for monitoring the origin of gold

    The message is loud and clear: the current system to prevent the importation and refining in Switzerland of illegal gold has been found lacking. The country’s financial watchdog reports that Customs data is not sufficiently transparent to differentiate between mined gold, bank gold and recycled gold, all of which are imported under the same code (HS 710812). This absence of identification means bars of dubious origin can easily slip through the net. The report also pinpoints inadequate legislation, compounded by underwhelming penalties: at worst, a CHF 2,000 fine.

    Switzerland bottom of the class for gold due diligence’, Christophe Roulet, FHH Journal

    3. Laundering crimes using gold is easy

    Image: ‘llegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    Back to top ↑

    Corruption and laundering gold is simple and easy

    Since there is no way to measure whether any given land could feasibly produce the reported amount of gold, illegal miners can co-opt owners of illegal permits to ‘wash’ gold for a fee – estimated by the public prosecutor’s office at 10% of the value of the gold transaction

    ‘Procedural Limitations of Monitoring and Tracking the Illegal Mining Process in the Brazilian Amazon’ (2021)

    In 2020, banks flagged $514.9bn suspicious transactions involving gold companies.


    FinCEN Files investigations into the gold trade from around the world. Kyra Guerny, International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, 2020.

    If there’s a crackdown in Peru, you just smuggle the gold across the border to Chile. Or if there’s a crackdown all across Latin America, then you can simply sell your gold through the Emirates, where there are very few controls. It’s a very difficult industry to completely eliminate the opportunities for money laundering, because it’s so global and you can just keep shifting your business.

    ‘‘Dirty Gold’ chases ‘three amigos’ from Miami to Peru and beyond’:
    International Consortium of Investigative Journalists

    Image: ‘llegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    4. Gold is a legal version of cocaine

    Image: ‘llegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    Back to top ↑

    For drug cartels in South America: Gold is just like a legitimate, legal version of cocaine

    “Criminal groups make so much more money from gold than from cocaine, and it’s so much easier

    Ivan Díaz Corzo, a former member of Colombia’s anti-criminal-mining task force. ‘How drug lords make billions smuggling gold to Miami for your jewelry and phones‘. Miami Herald, 2018.

    Drug-cartel associates posing as precious-metals traders buy and mine gold in Latin America. Cocaine profits are their seed money. They sell the metal through front companies — hiding its criminal taint — to refineries in the United States and other major gold-buying nations like Switzerland and the United Arab Emirates.

    Once the deal is made, the cocaine kingpins have successfully turned their dirty gold into clean cash. To the outside world, they’re not drug dealers anymore; they’re gold traders. That’s money laundering.

    ‘How drug lords make billions smuggling gold to Miami for your jewelry and phones‘. Miami Herald, 2018.

    5. Gold mining causes massive deforestation

    Back to top ↑

    Mining in Indigenous territories of the Amazon is responsible for 23% of deforestation, up from 4% in 2017

    “Over the past decade, illegal mining incursions — mostly small-scale gold extraction operations — have increased fivefold on Indigenous lands and threefold in other protected areas of Brazil”

    ‘Illegal mining in the Amazon hits record high amid Indigenous protests’, Jeff Tollerson, Nature 2021.

    “The Amazon Rainforest does not burn by itself. Behind every fire that is lit is corporate greed, like agribusiness. And behind them are the largest banks and corporations in the world. They are the ones who profit from this destruction. They profit from every centimeter of land invaded, from every tree cut and burned. In the flames, they see money.”

    Sônia Guajajara, executive director of the Association of Brazil’s Indigenous Peoples (APIB).

    6. Indigenous Yanomami have no rights to their land

    Image: ‘llegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    Back to top ↑

    Venezuela’s illegitimate Maduro regime has rolled back Indigenous rights to stop Yanomami from protesting against gold mining

    Venezuela’s constitution recognises its indigenous populations, yet their rights are trampled by the illegitimate Maduro criminal regime. The land is also occupied by armed Colombian groups and others working for the Maduro regime, which seeks to profit from selling the illegally mined minerals.

    ‘Under Maduro regime, indigenous people suffer’, Noelani Kirschner, Share America, 2020.

    7. Brazil’s racist President, Bolsonaro allows land-grabbing from indigenous people

    Image: Transparency International

    Back to top ↑

    Far Right president Jair Bolsonaro’s racist policies in Brazil call for an increase in gold mining, palm oil and cattle grazing and the ‘integration’ of Indigenous people

    More than 15% of the national territory is demarcated as indigenous land and quilombolas. Less than a million people live in these truly isolated places in Brazil, exploited and manipulated by NGOs. Let’s together integrate these citizens and value all Brazilians.

    Jair Bolsonaro

    https://twitter.com/jairbolsonaro/status/1080468589298229253?s=20

    “We are experiencing an emergency to defend indigenous lives and our territories. We need the world to know this, and to do its part. Indigenous land: not an inch less. Indigenous blood: not a single drop more.”

    Sônia Guajajara, executive director of the Association of Brazil’s Indigenous Peoples (APIB).

    8. Indigenous women and children are forced into sex slavery

    Back to top ↑

    Sex trafficking is common by women and children, as indigenous people’s traditional means of survival on the land is taken from them

    The scale of sex trafficking and paedophilia around illegal gold mines in parts of Latin America is staggering. Thousands of people working there fall prey to labor exploitation by organised crime groups, simply because they have to survive. Girls as young as 12 working in the brothels and bars around illegal gold mines.

    Sex trafficking ‘staggering’ in illegal Latin American gold mines: researchers’ By Anastasia Moloney, Thomson Reuters Foundation, 2016.

    Image: Barbara Crane Navarro

    Mining regions in the rainforest have become epicenters of human trafficking, disease and environmental destruction, according to government officials and human rights investigators. Miners are forced into slavery. Prostitutes set up camps near the miners, fueling the spread of sexually transmitted infections. One human rights group found that 2,000 sex workers, 60 percent of them children, were employed in a single mining area in Peru. Meanwhile, strip mining and the indiscriminate use of mercury to ferret out gold are turning swaths of the world’s most biodiverse ecosystems into a nightmarish moonscape. In 2016, Peru declared a temporary state of emergency over widespread mercury poisoning in Madre de Dios, a jungle province rife with illegal mining. Nearly four in five adults in the area’s capital city tested positive for dangerous levels of mercury…”

    Barbara Navarro

    9. Violence and murder in gold mining is common

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    Gold miners are controlled by fear of having their fingers cut off or of being executed

    The illegitimate Maduro regime both controls the illegal gold mining and turns a blind eye to environmental and human rights abuses. Human Rights Watch report collected testimonials from Venezuelan gold miners. The report revealed that miners are kept under tight control by syndicates of armed criminals, such as the guerilla organisation FARC, also known as the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, and the ELN, also known as the National Liberation Army. If miners or other members of the public are caught stealing they have their fingers publicly cut off or are killed.

    ‘Venezuela: Violent Abuses in Illegal Gold Mines’, Human Rights Watch, 2020.

    10. Mercury used in gold mining kills ecosystems, people and animals

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    Deadly mercury is used to extract gold out of the sludge. This poisons and kills everything in its path

    Firstly, water cannons blast away river banks. After this, toxic mercury is used by miners to extract gold from the sediment. After the process, the dumping of mercury contaminates the soil and seeps into the air and water. This permanently destroys the water table, dispersing mercury 100’s of miles away, contaminating fishing stocks, animals and humans. Both people and animals in gold mining regions have high levels of mercury present in their bodies, leading to chronic illnesses and problems with brain function.

    ‘The New Gold Rush’, Wake Forest University, 2018.

    Infographic: Illegal Gold Mining Chain Peru by Insight Crime

    11. Ecosystems rarely recover from the damage – they are dead

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    “Gold mining significantly limits the regrowth of Amazonian forests, and greatly reduces their ability to accumulate carbon. Recovery rates on abandoned mining pits and tailing ponds were among the lowest ever recorded for tropical forests, compared to recovery from agriculture and pasture.”

    Gold mining leaves deforested Amazon land barren for years, find scientists’ The Conversation, July 1, 2020.

    A typical mining site. Even five years after the mine has closed, there is still barely any vegetation. Michelle Kalamandeen, Author provided

    12. Jewellery and electronics companies and criminals are the only ones who benefit from gold

    Image: ‘lllegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

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    Venezuelan gold from Yanomami territories is laundered and ends up in global brands of jewellery and electronics

    An investigation of mercury trafficking networks in the Amazon reveals how Venezuelan gold is laundered into legitimate supply chains and could end up in products made by the world’s biggest corporations.

    Image: ‘lllegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    The tainted gold leaves the refineries in glittering bars stamped with their logos, and is sold to international corporations that incorporate the precious metal in our phones, computers, cars, and other technologies.

    Mercury: Chasing the Quicksilver by InfoAmazonia

    13. More than a million children work in gold mining around the world

    Image: Survival

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    There are more than 1 million children working in goldmines around the world. Some of this gold ends up in our mobile telephones. This is the conclusion of the study conducted by SOMO Centre for Research in recent months, which was commissioned by Stop Child Labour.

    Every year, the electronics industry uses 279,000 kg of gold with a value of more than 10 billion euros. Making it the third largest buyer of gold after the jewellery industry and the financial sector. Even though nearly all electronics companies state that they do not accept child labour, they are almost doing nothing to actively eradicate child labour in goldmines.

    Gold, Child Labour and Electronics

    How can I help?

    Image: ‘lllegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

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    Here’s some actions you can take every day to stop the corruption, destruction and human rights abuses associated with gold mining.

    1. Raise your voice online for the Yanomami using the hashtag #BoycottGold4Yanomami

    Share this article along with many articles by Indigenous Activist Barbara Crane Navarro about this issue on social media using the hashtag #BoycottGold4Yanomami

    Image: Barbara Crane Navarro

    2. Stop buying gold jewellery and investing in gold

    Put your money where your mouth is and don’t support this corrupt and evil industry.

    3. Buy vintage second-hand gold jewellery – don’t buy new gold

    This makes a unique and special gift for the one you love. It also does not require more mining to get the gold jewellery. This is the ONLY form of sustainable gold jewellery.

    Image: ‘lllegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    4. Don’t fall for the luxury advertising of jewellery brands like Chopard, Tiffany&Co, Cartier, Bvlgari etc.

    Don’t be a sucker for luxury. Remember the reality of what gold and diamond mining is doing to the natural world and to Indigenous people.

    Image: ‘lllegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    5. Fix and repair old mobile phones and laptops rather than buying new ones containing gold

    This can be hard with the planned obsolescence of a lot of technology (in other words the short lifespan). However all we can do is do our best. Also you can pressure tech brands to make their goods more long-lasting and repairable and cite this as a critical reason why their industry is corrupt, greedy and needs to change.

    Image: ‘lllegal gold that undermines forests and lives in the Amazon’ by Igarapé Institute

    6. Support Indigenous Rights NGOs that actually stop landgrabbing in the Amazon, Africa and elsewhere like Articulation of Indigenous Peoples of Brazil (APIB)

    APIB recently successfully took the Brazilian government and Bolsonaro to court for ecocide and deforestation. Avoid supporting NGO’s that do very little other than virtue-signalling, like Survival.

    Support APIB

    6. Follow Barbara Crane Navarro on Twitter and WordPress

    She has spent decades fighting for the Yanomami people.

    Images: Barbara Crane Navarro

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    #Artivism #BarbaraCraneNavarro #BoycottGold #BoycottGold4Yanomami #brandBoycotts #Brazil #collectiveAction #corruption #deforestation #ecocide #extinction #gold #goldMining #indigenous #IndigenousActivism #indigenousRights #mines #mining #SayNoToGold #Venezuela #Yanomami

  14. Dieses Mal haben wir die japanische Lackkünstlerin Sachiko Yano, die in Omihachiman in der Präfektur Shiga tätig ist, bei ihrer Arbeit gefilmt und ein Interview mit ihr geführt.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Zf6Rq7H1z8

    Eine Lackkünstlerin, die durch wiederholtes Auftragen und Polieren von Lack Werke mit Makie-Verzierungen schafft, die sich durch tiefen Glanz, eine schöne Ausstrahlung und ein Gefühl von Natur auszeichnen. In ihren minimalistischen, zurückhaltend verzierten Formen bringt sie die ursprüngliche Textur und den Glanz des Lacks zur Geltung und schafft so Werke, die zwar als Alltagsgeschirr dienen, aber dennoch eine würdevolle Ausstrahlung besitzen.

    #Gefäße #Interview #Japan #Kunst #Lack #Lackkünstlerin #SachikoAno #Tassen #Video #Wissen
  15. ⭕L'armée #Israélienne a massacré une famille libanaise, dans un bombardement sur #Yanouh. 3 morts au total. L'enfant #Hassan_Jaber et son père #Ali ont été tués par #Israël. (OTVLebanon)

    RE: https://bsky.app/profile/did:plc:2cte4wipyk47qjujtxrskqcx/post/3mego336s4t2a

  16. ⭕L'armée #Israélienne a massacré une famille libanaise, dans un bombardement sur #Yanouh. 3 morts au total. L'enfant #Hassan_Jaber et son père #Ali ont été tués par #Israël. (OTVLebanon)

    RE: https://bsky.app/profile/did:plc:2cte4wipyk47qjujtxrskqcx/post/3mego336s4t2a

  17. ⭕L'armée #Israélienne a massacré une famille libanaise, dans un bombardement sur #Yanouh. 3 morts au total. L'enfant #Hassan_Jaber et son père #Ali ont été tués par #Israël. (OTVLebanon)

    RE: https://bsky.app/profile/did:plc:2cte4wipyk47qjujtxrskqcx/post/3mego336s4t2a