Over the weekend, Andina
News Agency reported that more than 300 informal miners in the Peruvian
region of La Libertad had completed the process of mining formalization and
could immediately begin mining legally. La Libertad was the first province in
the region to complete the process, and neighboring communities are already
undergoing the training process.
Alessandra Herrera Jara, a representative of the General
Directorate for Mining Formalization in the Ministry of Energy and Mines attended
the graduation ceremony. She said in a speech that, “It is great to have a
result as clear as today’s. The ministry continuously supports the region of La
Libertad so that it can continue the process of formalization. We know that
this is a complicated effort. Speaking of formalization is to speak of an
activity that will bring benefits both for you and for the State.”
Despite the Peruvian government’s intense focus on
formalizing the country’s hundreds of thousands of informal miners, it is
important to note that informal mining is not solely responsible for polluting the
environment. Late last week, La
Republica reported on a denouncement issued by a group of mayors protesting
the contamination of the Ramis River.
The mayors traveled to their regional capital of Puno to
call on the governor to bring to justice the mining companies that tossed their
waste into the river. One local leader told the press that, “During a campaign
they offer everything, but now they do nothing. I would like for the authorities
to consume the contaminated water and live alongside a dead river. I don’t
think they’d last one week.”
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