Home / Environment / Liberia River Poisoned: Gold Mine Blamed
Liberia River Poisoned: Gold Mine Blamed
30 Jan
Summary
- Toxic spills from Bea Mountain mine force villagers to abandon homes.
- Company repeatedly exceeded pollution limits, failed to notify regulators.
- Gold refiner MKS PAMP reviews relationship with polluting mining company.

Residents of Jikandor village in Liberia are abandoning their ancestral homes because the river they rely on has become toxic. They accuse Bea Mountain Mining Corporation, the country's largest gold producer, of polluting the water with cyanide, arsenic, and copper. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) reports, retrieved after being removed from the agency's website, indicate that the company's facilities repeatedly leaked contaminants at levels exceeding legal limits over several years.
Further investigation revealed that Bea Mountain failed to alert regulators promptly after a 2022 spill and obstructed government inspectors attempting to access its laboratory. Experts described the company's actions as sustained negligence. These incidents also expose the Liberian government's shortcomings in holding the company accountable, despite owning a 5% stake and possessing the legal authority to suspend licenses.




