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Peru pollution ruling a ‘gigantic step’ for environmen­tal justice

- BOGOTA, (Thomson Reuters Foundation)

- A court’s ruling that residents of a polluted Peruvian mining town have the right to a healthy environmen­t could be a milestone for similar cases in Latin America, though the blighted community still faces hurdles in its fight for justice.

The Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACHR) ruled in March that Peru had failed to regulate a 100-year-old smelter complex in the Andean town of La Oroya and stem pollution that contaminat­ed the air, water and soil for decades, harming local people’s health.

“This case is the first time that the court is ... really recognizin­g a connection between the health of an environmen­t and the health of human communitie­s,” said Jacob Kopas, senior attorney at the Earthjusti­ce environmen­tal group, who has been working on the case for over a decade.

The ruling, which is binding and cannot be appealed, paves the way for other pollution-hit communitie­s in Peru and across Latin America to seek justice, and could also influence future climate change litigation in the region, Kopas added.

“Now with this precedent, we can point to it and say yes you have access to justice - this has been recognized as a human rights violation,” said Kopas.

The ruling by the Americas top human rights court ordered Peru to pay damages to residents affected by toxic pollution stating that victims should receive at least $30,000 each in damages, with the most vulnerable receiving $50,000.

It also ordered the government to assess the current state of contaminat­ion in La Oroya, set up air pollution monitoring and alert systems, provide free medical care to the victims and publicly acknowledg­e its wrongdoing.

The complex, which is currently operated by Metalurgic­a Business Peru SAC, a firm that counts former workers among its shareholde­rs, will be able to continue operating.

Liliana Avila, a lawyer with the non-profit Interameri­can Associatio­n for Environmen­tal Defense (AIDA) who represente­d the La Oroya plaintiffs before the Costa Ricabased court, said the ruling was a “milestone that is a gigantic step in advancing environmen­tal justice in Latin America.”

But Yolanda Zurita, one of 80 petitioner­s in the case, said her fight would now switch to ensuring victims get the compensati­on ordered by the court.

“The next process is to demand that the state complies with the ruling. It will be difficult but not impossible,” the 65-year-old environmen­tal campaigner told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

“Our fight, our resistance is for the well-being of future generation­s so they can have a better quality of life,” she said.

Peru’s Environmen­t Minister Juan Carlos Castro told local media after the ruling that government attempts over the years to stop pollution in La Oroya had been difficult because the smelter was a key source of jobs.

“We’re a country that adheres to the InterAmeri­can Court and we are going to respect what it says, as long as the agency (Justice Ministry) of our country determines it in this way,” Castro added. MILESTONE RULING For a century, La Oroya’s 30,000 inhabitant­s have shared their town with the smelter complex that began operating in 1922 and continues to churn out metals including gold, silver, lead, zinc and copper.

The case included evidence given by La Oroya residents of skin, heart and stomach problems, chronic headaches, respirator­y illnesses, along with lead poisoning they blame on the gray smog caused by the smelter that sits in the middle of the town.

The court said it had corroborat­ed that exposure to lead, cadmium, arsenic and sulfur dioxide posed a significan­t risk to local residents, who did not receive adequate medical attention from the government when they became ill.

“It is sufficient to establish

that the State allowed the existence of levels of contaminat­ion that put people’s health at significan­t risk,” the ruling said.

Nearly all the children in the case had high lead levels in their blood, many times higher than World Health Organizati­on guidelines, according to Earthjusti­ce.

‘WAKE-UP CALL’

The court ruling could inspire more communitie­s in Peru and beyond to bring pollution cases against government­s.

Zurita said she had already received calls from other community leaders across Peru, who are suffering from similar types of industrial and water pollution caused by mining, asking for advice about how to develop a legal case and bring it to court.

“The seeds have been sown for others to resist,” she said.

While the La Oroya case was the IACHR’s first such ruling, it is among an increasing number of environmen­tal lawsuits brought by citizens against government­s in Latin America that hinge on human rights law.

The region has been at the “vanguard” of the concept of a healthy environmen­t, with some countries recognizin­g the right in their constituti­ons, said Kopas.

The court ruling will reverberat­e in court decisions and influence constituti­onal law linked to environmen­tal issues, he

added.

“Pretty much every case in Latin America we are going to be working on from here on now, we are going to cite this case,” he said. “When the (IACHR) orders something, government­s basically know that this is not going to go away.”

“We are hoping that this will be a wake-up call for a lot of countries that you can’t ignore the human health impacts of pollution going forward.”

 ?? ?? The smelter complex in the Andean highland town of La Oroya, Peru. January 30 2017. Mitchell Gilbert/Interameri­can Associatio­n for Environmen­tal Defense (AIDA)/Handout via Thomson Reuters Foundation
The smelter complex in the Andean highland town of La Oroya, Peru. January 30 2017. Mitchell Gilbert/Interameri­can Associatio­n for Environmen­tal Defense (AIDA)/Handout via Thomson Reuters Foundation

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