BELGRADE — Hundreds of environmental protesters blocked
roads in
Belgrade and other Serbian towns on Saturday, angered at mining giant
Rio Tinto's plans to extract lithium in the Balkan nation.
اضافة اعلان
Substantial deposits of lithium, a key component for electric
car batteries, are found around the western town of Loznica, where the
Anglo-Australian company has started to buy land but is still waiting for the
green light from the state to begin mining.
In Belgrade, protesters blocked the main bridge in the capital
and a major intersection for an hour, after scuffles with security forces who
eventually let them carry on with their action.
"I am here because I don't want them to sell off the
land of my ancestors. Serbia is not for sale," one of the protesters, Milan
Milosavljevic, a 31-year-old musician, told AFP.
Protesters also blocked roads in several other Serbian
towns, including Novi Sad in the north, central Kragujevac, Sabac in the
northwest and the western town of Valjevo, according to the N1 television channel.
Rio Tinto discovered lithium reserves in the Loznica region
in 2006.
The company intends to invest $2.4 billion in the project,
according to
Vesna Prodanovic, director of Rio Sava, Rio Tinto's sister company
in Serbia.
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