Peru: 10,000 Aymaras Protesting against Transnational Mining Company

31st May 2011
For the past three weeks, more than 10,000 Indige­nous Peo­ple, most­ly Aymaras, have been protest­ing against the oncom­ing San­ta Ana sil­ver mine in south­east­ern Peru near the bor­der with Bolivia.

31st May 2011
For the past three weeks, more than 10,000 Indige­nous Peo­ple, most­ly Aymaras, have been protest­ing against the oncom­ing San­ta Ana sil­ver mine in south­east­ern Peru near the bor­der with Bolivia.

The Indige­nous peo­ple are con­cerned that pol­lu­tion from the new mine would threat­en their liveli­hoods and con­t­a­m­i­nate local rivers and lakes. For those rea­sons, the pro­test­ers want to see the Peru­vian gov­ern­ment revoke the min­ing license it grant­ed to the com­pa­ny behind the min­ing project, Canada’s Bear Creek Min­ing Cor­po­ra­tion. The pro­test­ers are also call­ing for a def­i­nite ban on all min­ing in the region.

The mas­sive protest, for which the Aymara and some Quechua have set up a sequence of block­ades along a 300km stretch of road on both sides of bor­der, was fac­ing a media black­out until this past week­end.

On May 27, a num­ber of gov­ern­ment build­ings in the Peru­vian bor­der town of Puno were loot­ed and set ablaze.

That seemed to give the media what they need­ed; how­ev­er, the orga­niz­ers of the protests are insist­ing that they aren’t respon­si­ble for the vio­lent lash out. Rather, they say, it was brought on by indi­vid­u­als who have infil­trat­ed the protests.

In hand with the lack of media cov­er­age, the police and mil­i­tary pres­ence through­out the protest has been almost non-exis­tent. On May 28, Reuters report­ed that Pres­i­dent Gar­cia has indeed autho­rized the mil­i­tary to “main­tain order”, but so far they haven’t tried do so.

That’s part­ly because of the sheer scale of the protest; but more­so because of the upcom­ing pres­i­den­tial elec­tion in Peru, which is set for June 5. Accord­ing to Reuters, Gar­cia has stat­ed that he won’t give the order to stop the protests until after the elec­tion con­cludes.

There was, how­ev­er, at least one vio­lent con­fronta­tion before the protest was in full swing. As not­ed on the WW4 Report,

At least one is report­ed dead in Peru’s south­ern region of Puno after the Nation­al Police fired on pro­test­ers April 26, the sec­ond day of a 48-hour civ­il strike or paro called by campesino groups to demand a halt to local min­ing and petro­le­um leas­es. The deceased, iden­ti­fied as María Choque Limache, 61, died after inhal­ing tear gas as police broke up a protest at the vil­lage of Yohoro­co, in Huacul­lani dis­trict of Chu­cuito province, accord­ing to Wal­ter Adu­viri Cal­isaya, pres­i­dent of the Puno Front for the Defense of Nat­ur­al Resources. Nation­al Police com­man­der Jaime Cordero Ayala denied this ver­sion of events, insist­ing she had not been at the protest and had died of nat­ur­al caus­es.

Most recent­ly, on May 29, the pro­test­ers reject­ed a deal to stand down in exchange for a 12-month mora­to­ri­um on min­ing. Nego­tia­tors for the pro­test­ers ini­tial­ly agreed with the offer, but the pro­test­ers them­selves said they won’t set­tle for any­thing less than a defin­i­tive ban on min­ing which must be rat­i­fied through a pres­i­den­tial decree.

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