Peru Charges Police In Torturing Opponents Of Copper Project
2009年3月19日 - 1:48AM
Dow Jones News
Peruvian prosecutor Juan Ortiz Arevalo said Wednesday the state
has charged a group of police officers with torturing opponents to
a still-undeveloped copper mine in northern Peru.
Last year, a human rights group filed a complaint alleging
police kidnapped and tortured more than two dozen opponents to the
Rio Blanco copper mine project in 2005.
The project is run by U.K.-based Monterrico Metals PLC (MNA.LN),
which calls it "one of the largest undeveloped copper resources in
the world."
Xiamen Zijin Tongguan Development Co. Ltd., a consortium led by
China's Zijin Mining Group Co. (2899.HK), took a controlling
interest in Monterrico in 2007.
Last month, Erika Sernaque, a state prosecutor investigating the
case, said evidence includes a series of photographs showing
protesters in police custody, tightly handcuffed with plastic bags
over their heads. Low-earning Peruvian police officers often work
private security jobs, including at mines.
The project has faced strong opposition from nearby residents
and environmentalists who say it will destroy the region's fertile
soil and biodiverse cloud forests, and contaminate water used by
local farmers.
In September 2007, more than 90% of the residents in three
villages around the deposit rejected the project in a non-binding
vote.
Rio Blanco is estimated to hold 1.257 billion tons at 0.57%
copper and 228 ppm molybdenum, according to the Xiamen Zijin
Tongguan consortium.
The government of Peru, one of the world's top producers of base
and precious metals, has given strong support to the Rio Blanco
project, despite the staunch opposition from the surrounding
communities.
-By Leslie Josephs; Dow Jones Newswires; 511-211-2689;
peru@dowjones.com
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