Thousands of striking workers blockaded roads leading to Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc’s mine in easternmost Indonesia yesterday, preventing food, medicine and other supplies from reaching holed-up staffers and their families.
Production at the mine was at a near standstill for a second day because of security concerns and damage to the pipeline that channels concentrates to the port, PT Freeport Indonesia spokesperson Ramdani Sirait said.
Strikers at the Grasberg mine in Papua Province — which holds some of the largest gold and copper reserves in the world — are demanding salaries equivalent to what the Phoenix, Arizona-based company pays in other countries.
Analysts say that is unlikely given the high cost of doing business in the remote, mountainous region, which is also home to a decades-long low-level insurgency.
Tensions soared with the deaths last week of five miners — two shot by police trying to control a crowd and three killed by unidentified gunmen — prompting Freeport to announce a halt to operations on Monday at both its underground and open-pit mines.
Reduced levels of concentrate were being produced yesterday, the company said, but it was ready to suspend activity at any time if conditions warranted.
The blockade around the mine and at the port has prevented Freeport from sending supplies to replacement workers and their families, Sirait said.
“With no food or medical supplies, we’re very worried about the condition of our employees and their families,” he said. “We really hope the government will help open this blockade.”
About 90 percent of the mine’s 12,000 employees went on strike on Sept. 15, demanding that current salaries of between US$2.10 to US$3.50 an hour be raised as high as US$17 to US$43.
It is the second strike this year at the gold and copper mine in Papua.
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