Kids are sick in Peru - Ira Rennert could give a shit.
American Ira Rennert is the CEO of the Renco Group Inc., a corporation known for its disastrous environmental record. Rencos Doe Run Peru subsidiary controls one of the ten worst environmental sites in the world in La Oroya, Peru, according to the Blacksmith Institute. This lead smelter has been a cash cow for billionaire Rennerts offshore companies. It has also exposed thousands of Peruvians to extraordinary high levels of lead contamination. Most of children in La Oroya have lead poisoning.
Doe Run Peru
Despite spending hundreds of thousands of dollar lobbying the Obama administration to try and save Doe Run Peru, Rennerts company has been forced to submit yet another restructuring plan to try to avoid liquidation of its interest in the notorious lead smelter. Peruvian and U.S. sources say Rennerts representatives are trying to secure financing packages that would satisfy their largest creditor: the Peruvian government. But since La Republica, Perus most influential newspaper, has been focusing on the La Oroya controversy, the government has taken a much tougher line.
Until 2009, Doe Run Peru produced large profits for Rennerts companies through its smelting operations. As the current government began to focus on La Oroya and demand the promised changes, Rennerts company threatened to pull out of Peru altogether. The standoff caused the smelter to be shuttered in 2009 putting thousands of workers on the street. Doe Roe Peru charged that it was the Peruvian government that had failed to live up to its agreements to clean up parts of the site. The government and Doe Run Peru blamed each other about who was responsible for the long postponed much needed massive clean-up and environmental remediation.
Offshore companies controlled by New York billionaire Rennert took over the operation when Peru was being run by the corrupt Fujimori regime in the 1990s. At the time, Rennerts subsidiary, Doe Run Peru, had agreed to make large investments in the smelter to mitigate the environmental damage it was causing in exchange for the rights to exploit the facility. The chaos after the 2000 change in the Peruvian leadership allowed Rennerts companies to pull vast amounts of money out of La Oroya without ever completing all the promised environmental investments in the facility.http://www.dcbureau.org/201206177442/bulldog-blog/rennerts-peru-smelter-in-trouble.html