The Korea Herald

Illegal gold mining eats into Peruvian Amazon

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MADRE DE DIOS, Peru (AFP) — On the banks of the Madre de Dios river, dredges work day and night in search of gold, part of a scourge of illegal mining that is slowly devouring the Peruvian Amazon.

This megadivers­e region of southeast Peru has lost on average 21,000 hectares of rain forest — an area twice the size of Paris — every year since 2017 despite policing efforts locals say are insufficie­nt.

Where trees used to stand there are now deep sinkholes flooded with brown water where dredges sift through mountains of rubble for the valuable particles.

“The community can no longer plant their corn, their bananas, their cassava, because this land is practicall­y dead,” Jaime Vargas, a 47-year-old Shipibo Indigenous leader and reforestat­ion activist, told Agence France-Presse.

Although mining is prohibited in their territorie­s, Indigenous people have no choice but to coexist with invading gold prospector­s in the Madre de Dios department of some 180,000 inhabitant­s near Peru’s borders with Brazil and Bolivia.

Some even end up working for them.

As the internatio­nal price of gold soared in recent years to reach an all-time high in May, the hunt for the precious metal has only increased in Peru — the world’s tenth-biggest producer and second in Latin America, according to the US Geological Survey.

Illegal gold mining, which happens alongside legal, government­regulated extraction, is a major source of financing for organized crime in places like La Pampa, a lawless enclave in Madre de Dios.

“Illegal miners are invading us from all sides,” resident Lucio Quispe, 40, told AFP with more resignatio­n than anger.

With his two brothers, Quispe runs a 200-hectare concession granted by the state.

Just hours before the interview, his brothers were brutally attacked by machete-wielding men in a region where clashes over mining spots often turn violent.

A process has been underway since 2016 to issue licences to informal but sanctioned miners such as the Quispes.

In 2022, official data showed Peru produced 96 tons of gold — but exported about 180 tons to Canada, India, Switzerlan­d and the United States.

“Forty-five percent of exports have no production record,” according to an official body tasked with overseeing Peruvian banks and combating money laundering.

Independen­t studies have named Peru as the largest exporter of illegal gold in South America, with 44 percent of the total, ahead of Colombia with 25 percent and Bolivia with 12 percent, according to the Peruvian Institute of Economics, a think tank.

Trying to get a grip on the problem and protect nature reserves in Madre de Dios, Peru in 2010 demarcated a corridor of 5,000 square kilometers where informal miners will be allowed to operate until the end of this year.

Of the 9,000 informal miners registered by the 2019 cutoff date, only about 200 have obtained a license to date, according to Augusto Villegas, regional director of energy and mines for Madre de Dios.

In the corridor, every 100 cubic meters of soil dredged yields about 10 to 15 grams of alluvial gold, which today fetches a price of about $63 per gram.

“You can’t make an omelette without breaking eggs; you can’t mine in Madre de Dios without sacrificin­g the forest,” said Villegas.

Many miners also continue to use toxic mercury to separate gold from the sediment, despite Peru signing an internatio­nal agreement to scale down its use, and banning imports in 2015.

As the price of mercury exploded, some small-scale miners decided to take a bet on “ecological gold.”

Lucila Huanco, 54, said she stopped using mercury three years ago on her 3,000-hectare concession, instead using a gravitatio­nal technique to release the gold.

At first, her gold fetched a lower price for its appearance, different to gold mined using mercury.

But then she reached an agreement with a buyer in Lima who pays her about $70 per gram.

“Honestly,” Huanco said, “I don’t want us to be known as polluters anymore.”

 ?? AFP-Yonhap ?? A miner works in a gold mining area in the Madre de Dios department, in Peru’s southeaste­rn Amazon region, May 30.
AFP-Yonhap A miner works in a gold mining area in the Madre de Dios department, in Peru’s southeaste­rn Amazon region, May 30.

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