The Denver Post

Vowing to bring hammer down

- By Franklin Briceno

lima, peru » The clock has run out for an estimated 40,000 illegal gold miners who had until Saturday to legalize their status in a region of southeaste­rn Peru where fortune-seekers have ravaged rain forests and contaminat­ed rivers.

The government’s vowto enforce a ban on illegal mining is raising fears of bloody confrontat­ions.

The miners have been clashing with police while intermitte­ntly blocking traffic on the commercial­ly vital interocean­ic highway that links the Pacific coast with Brazil, protesting government attempts to squeeze them out by restrictin­g shipments of the gasoline they use for their machinery. One miner has been killed and more than 50 wounded.

Officials insist that this time they’re serious about combatting the multibilli­on-dollar illegal mining trade that accounts for about 20 percent of Peru’s gold exports.

“We’re not backing down even one inch,” said Daniel Urresti, the former army officer leading the task for President Ollanta Humala.

The unrest already has left the region’s cities short of food, inflating prices, and local authoritie­s who support the miners have traveled to the capital to press for more time. They were denied an audience with Urresti and other officials.

“I don’t knowwhat’s going to happen after the government deadline lapses. I think the violencewi­ll begin,” said JorgeAldaz­abal, governor of the Madre de Dios region who has spent more than a week camped out in front of a 17th-century church to protest the crackdown and demand a solution.

Peru criminaliz­ed unpermitte­d mining in rivers and other protected natural zones in 2012 but repeatedly delayed implementi­ng the law, which imposes up to 12 years in jail and fines of up to $54,000 on violators.

Now, with the govern- ment preparing to host global climate talks in December and the world’s eyes upon it, authoritie­s insist they are determined to end the illegal mining.

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 ??  ?? Miners chant anti-government slogans during a protest in March organized by artisanal and smallscale gold miners in Lima, Peru.
Miners chant anti-government slogans during a protest in March organized by artisanal and smallscale gold miners in Lima, Peru.

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