Stabroek News

UN experts tell Peru to halt oil talks until pollution remedied

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LIMA, (Reuters) - United Nations human rights experts yesterday called on Peru to suspend negotiatio­ns on a new contract for a large oilfield in the Amazon until past pollution was cleaned up and the rights of indigenous groups respected.

Canada’s Frontera Energy Corporatio­n now operates Block 192 in the Peruvian Amazon and is in talks with Peru about renewing its contract once the current one expires in September. U.N. Special Rapporteur­s Baskut Tuncak and Victoria TauliCorpu­z, independen­t experts tasked with investigat­ing human rights issues, said Peru had failed to clean up pollution from oil spills in the region and was not doing enough to ensure indigenous groups had a voice in talks.

“The Peruvian Government must suspend the direct negotiatio­ns with companies until the right to free, prior and informed consent is guaranteed, and all environmen­tal damage has been remedied,” Tuncak and Tauli-Corpuz said in a statement from the U.N. Human Rights Council.

The remarks will likely be welcomed by indigenous rights activists in Peru who say a law requiring the government to include native groups in talks on projects affecting them has not been fully enforced.

Peru’s environmen­t ministry and energy and mines ministry did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment. In previous years, the government has declared several environmen­tal emergencie­s in the region due to oil pollution.

Frontera did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

Peru’s government has been trying to jumpstart investment­s in the country’s oil industry that have dropped sharply since global oil prices fell and a series of ruptures largely shuttered the main pipeline serving the sector.

The aging pipeline, operated by state-owned oil company Petroperu, suffered a new rupture this week, Petroperu said Wednesday. The company has blamed most of the dozen spills from the pipeline last year on attacks from unknown parties.

In June, Frontera reached a deal with indigenous people who had occupied Block 192 in a landuse dispute. The company agreed to pay them for use of land and finance community projects.

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