Peru’s government has spent millions of dollars on raids of illegal miners as the industry has continued its advance into protected areas of the Amazon jungle.
The government’s strategy revolves around raids on illegal mining camps as well as convincing informal miners to register their businesses. Authorities conducted 62 raids in 2015 and five so far in 2016.
The government uses helicopters and thousands of police officers and military to conduct each raid on illegal mining towns which sometimes have transitory populations numbering in the thousands. Agents blow up the miners’ equipment and chemical inputs, but miners are seldom arrested. Each raid costs the government $300,000.
Peru’s government has spent over $20 million in its fight against illegal mining operations since 2015. In addition to the government expenditure, the raids have cost the country tens of millions of dollars in heavy machinery. Police destroyed an estimated $14 million in equipment just in the five raids of 2016.
Despite the energy and investment, illegal mining camps are increasingly encroaching on Peru’s national parks and forests in Madre de Dios, Loreto, Huanuco, Amazonas, Puno and more.
Just in Madre de Dios, the heart of illegal mining in Peru, more than 150 square miles of rainforest were destroyed between 2001 and 2014. And the rate of deforestation has more than doubled from around nine square miles per year before 2009 to 19 square miles lost per year since 2010.
The miners often set up again within weeks after a raid. One official involved in raids in Madre de Dios told Peru Reports that illegal gold mining is too profitable.
“Two weeks after we clear them out, they set up in the same place or maybe somewhere else,” the official said. “There is too much gold in the ground and it’s not too difficult to get it out. They make too much money.”
Meanwhile, the illegal miners continue to advance toward Peru’s protected parks. A recent story by El Comercio reported that some 2,000 miners were operating inside the Tambopata reserve. Park rangers run across the miners regularly, but the latter are well-armed so the rangers do little more than observe. The report identified 16 illegal mining camps in the Tambopata reserve, a national park.
Informal mining settlements sell fuel and chemical inputs in broad daylight. It is common to see satellite phones and cable antennas. Prostitution bars are another fixture of the camps. An estimated 400 brothels are operating in Madre de Dios alone.
The United Nations has recently expressed concern about the construction of a road through the Manu National Park, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The Madre de Dios state government built over nine miles of road through the park to Puerto Maldonado despite not having approval from Peru’s national park service.
When the national government ordered construction to stop, Manu province villagers took 40 tourists hostage from boats touring the Manu and Alto Madre de Dios rivers.
Critics say the road will be used to transport fuel and other inputs for the illegal mining and logging industries. Meanwhile, Madre de Dios congressman Amado Romero is pushing for the transportation commission to approve the viability of the road. Romero, who has been suspended from Congress for his links to illegal mining before, insists the road is needed to connect indigenous tribes of Manu province to Puerto Maldonado.
While Romero is a leader in advocating for illegal miners even if he doesn’t acknowledge it, similar candidates in 2016 elections are looking to represent Madre de Dios and Puno in Congress. El Comercio has identified candidates suspected of having links to illegal mining on the Popular Strength, Peruvians for Change, Possible Peru and Broad Front tickets in Madre Dios, as well as on the Popular Strength, Peruvians for Change and Everybody for Peru tickets in Puno.
President Ollanta Humala’s government has passed a series of laws aimed to curb illegal mining, including prison sentences of 10 years.
Another law regulated the sale of key chemical inputs in Madre de Dios state, and limited the amount consumers who were not registered as miners could buy. This regulation prompted protests which paralyzed the provincial capital of Puerto Maldonado for over a week.
The government points out that more than 70,000 informal miners have begun the registration process. However only 40% of those have gotten past the second of five steps.
Sources
La fiebre ilegal de oro sigue destruyendo la selva [VIDEO] (El Comercio)
Candidatos vinculados minería ilegal en Puno y Madre de Dios (El Comercio)
Minería ilegal: 62 megaoperaciones de interdicción en el 2015 (El Comercio)
La trata de personas en el Perú: el delito invisible [INFORME] (El Comercio)
Destruyen maquinaria de minería ilegal valorizada en más de dos millones de dólares (Andina)
View Comments (3)
...but mners are seldom arrested. That is the reason for this dilemma.
I have been studying the mining problems of Ecuador and Peru since 2000. I have come to the conclusion that one has to find the root problem. The root problem has nothing to do with gold nor mining, these are simply a means to getting the things we all want. Therefore finding a solution to the root problem takes care of the mining problem. And that is creating a system where money flows freely. This can be done with a local currency exchange system. The other root problem is that governments do not want to solve any problems, problems are what government feed from, their bread and butter.
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Awful situation in Brazil and in all south america as this article says: http://www.lematrix.co/main/yanomami-community-contaminated-by-mercury-nearby-amazonas-river-in-brazil/