Mining Giant Convicted Over Dam Disaster

A judge ordered Vale SA to pay for repairing "all the damages" caused by the containment dam rupture, which killed nearly 300 in January.

In this Jan. 28, 2019, file photo, firefighters prepare a body to be lifted away by a helicopter, after pulling the dead person from the mud days after a dam collapse in Brumadinho, Brazil.
In this Jan. 28, 2019, file photo, firefighters prepare a body to be lifted away by a helicopter, after pulling the dead person from the mud days after a dam collapse in Brumadinho, Brazil.
AP Photo/Leo Correa, File

Brazilian mining giant Vale SA has been hit with its first conviction for a rupture of a containment dam that sent a tidal wave of mining waste through a rural community, killing nearly 300 people in January.

A state court announced the conviction in a statement posted on its website Tuesday.

Judge Elton Pupo Nogueira ordered Vale to pay for repairing "all the damages caused by the tragedy." He did not set a specific amount for the company to pay, but said the costs will be related to the deaths as well as damage to the environment and local economy.

The judge maintained a freeze on $2.9 billion in Vale assets. The court statement said Vale's defense did not deny responsibility for the damages caused by the dam rupture.

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