The Borneo Post

Four Peru indigenous leaders killed defending land

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Four indigenous leaders fighting deforestat­ion in theAmazon rainforest were killed by suspected members of an illegal logging ring, a rights group said Tuesday.

The four leaders of the Ashaninka people, a group from a remote area along the border between Brazil and Peru, “were murdered by presumed illegal loggers for defending their land,” said Peru’s main indigenous organisati­on, AIDESEP.

Locals told police that the men – Edwin Chota Valera, Leoncio Quincima Melendez, Jorge Rios Perez and Francisco Pinedo – were killed in front of their communitie­s on Sept 1.

One of the leaders, Edwin Chota Valera, had received death threats from illegal loggers, local media reported.

AIDESEP called on authoritie­s to investigat­e the deaths.

Peru’s vice minister for intercultu­ral affairs, Patricia Balbuena, told journalist­s the government had launched a probe and was considerin­g creating a police station in the area, a northeaste­rn region at the headwaters of the Tamaya River.

“For decades, there has been no security presence there,” she said.

Indigenous communitie­s in the Amazon have been beset by illegal logging rings that infiltrate their lands and exploit their valuable hardwoods, maintainin­g control through threats, violence and the lack of formal land titles. — AFP

 ??  ?? People look at the clothes of victims killed by the army during the 1980-2000 civil war in Peru, whose bodies were exhumed from a mass grave in Peru’s Andean region of Ayacucho, during an exhibition at the Public Ministry in Lima. The one-week...
People look at the clothes of victims killed by the army during the 1980-2000 civil war in Peru, whose bodies were exhumed from a mass grave in Peru’s Andean region of Ayacucho, during an exhibition at the Public Ministry in Lima. The one-week...

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