China-owned Las Bambas fails to evict indigenous Peruvian community from mine

China-owned Las Bambas fails to evict indigenous Peruvian community from mine
China-owned Las Bambas fails to evict indigenous Peruvian community from mine Copyright Thomson Reuters 2022
Copyright Thomson Reuters 2022
By Reuters
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By Marcelo Rochabrun

LIMA - At least one protesting indigenous community continued on Friday to occupy MMG's Las Bambas copper mine in Peru as operations remained halted, the company and two community sources said, despite police operations to evict them.

Peru is the world's No. 2 copper producer and Chinese-owned Las Bambas is one of the world's top miners of the red metal, supplying 2% of global supply. The mine is key to Peru's economy, accounting for 1% of the Andean nation's gross domestic product.

The company described the protesters as "armed with stones, Molotov cocktails and other weapons," the company said in a statement, adding people had attacked security agents and that several of them had been hurt.

The indigenous communities of Fuerabamba and Huancuire entered the mine on April 14 and set up camp inside, forcing Las Bambas to suspend operations a week later. They allege the mine has not fully honored previous commitments with them.

On Thursday, police forces tried but failed to evict Huancuire, while Fuerabamba was evicted earlier in the week but tried to re-enter the mine, according to representatives of both communities.

"We are inside and we are going to recover 100% of the territory," said Edison Vargas, President of the Fuerabamba community.

Las Bambas said Fuerabamba was trying to enter but did not confirm if it had managed to do so. Fuerabamba was resettled almost a decade ago to make way for the construction of Las Bambas.

Huancuire has not been resettled but is opposing Las Bambas's plans to expand its mining operations closer to its territory.

Alexander Raul, a community adviser to Huancuire, said that Friday would mark 15 days since the community entered the mine.

The two-week period is key as Peruvian law allows property owners to use force to evict trespassers in the first 15 days of an invasion, but after that they need to go through a lengthier legal process.

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