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Four charged in Finland toxic leak

Talvivaara nickel mine.

Four persons representing the Talvivaara nickel mine were indicted on Monday by the Eastern Finland public prosecutor.

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By YLE News

The charges levied include criminal negligence in the design and research phase of the nickel mine, as well as negligence in the environmental and water management permit application. Operators in charge of the construction and commission of the gypsum pond that was the source of the leaks and the mine’s waste treatment and disposal are also charged with criminal negligence.

Four persons representing the Talvivaara nickel mine were indicted on Monday by the Eastern Finland public prosecutor. The charges levied include criminal negligence in the design and research phase of the nickel mine, as well as negligence in the environmental and water management permit application.

Operators in charge of the construction and commission of the mine’s waste treatment and disposal and the gypsum pond that was the source of the leaks are also charged with criminal negligence. Heikki Ylisirniö, district prosecutor for Eastern Finland public prosecutor’s office, and Kimmo Vakkala from the Oulu district prosecutor’s office filed charges against four persons associated with the Talvivaara mine.

Charged with aggravated environmental impairment
Four men, CEO Pekka Perä and former CEO Harri Natunen and Lassi Lammassaari and Ville Heikkinen, have been charged with aggravated environmental impairment. The company’s operating subsidiary Talvivaara Sotkamo has also been charged a corporate fine.

According to the summons, the plaintiffs in the case are several local fishing waters associations, the state-owned forest administrator Metsähallitus, the Kainuu ELY centre and two property owners.

A press release from the Eastern Finland public prosecutor’s office says the prosecution concerns criminal negligence in the Talvivaara mine’s design and research phase, operator negligence in the associated environmental and water management permit applications, operator negligence in waste handling and disposal, operator negligence in the construction and commission of the gypsum pool, and the controlled and uncontrolled leakage of water containing toxic levels of sodium, sulphate and manganese discharges into the surrounding terrain.

The prosecution chose not to press charges for dust, noise or hydrogen sulphide emissions or the omission of a environmental and water management permit for the first phase of the subsequent uranium recovery. The case will proceed with a written preparation from the Kainuu district court, where the plantiffs’ demands will be outlined and the accused will be given the opportunity to respond to the charges against them. The district court will then decide how to proceed.

The Finnish online magazine Long Play recently reported that the mine’s senior management ignored warnings about environmental problems at the site.

This story is posted on BarentsObserver as part of Eye on the Arctic, a collaborative partnership between public and private circumpolar media organizations.