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After protests, Peru lawmakers extend mining permits

The Peruvian Congress approved on Tuesday a bill that would extend temporary permits to informal miners through the year 2027. This was done as over a thousand protesters gathered outside the legislative building against the impending expiration of the permits. The bill is now going to be discussed in full plenary sessions of Congress before it can be approved. The REINFO program, which provides a temporary legal status and has been extended multiple times, is set to expire on December. The day before, miners protested again because they felt that the government's efforts to force them into formalizing their claims were too complicated and expensive.

Most of these gold miners want an additional five years to leave the temporary system. Mining companies and professionals in the industry have expressed concern that another extension would increase illegal activity. The REINFO scheme, they say, has allowed illegal miners to profit, sometimes working alongside criminal gangs.

This debate is just five months away from general elections, in which many lawmakers are running for re-election.

Maximo Franco bequer, a union leader, said that he had met with Jose Jeri on Friday. Jeri took office in the month of January. Bequer reported that the president had "promised" to assess the situation with informal miners before he took a position regarding any possible decision made by Congress. Peru is one of the world's leading mining countries, and it exported gold worth $15.5 billion in 2024. According to data from the sector and the country's financial regulator, an estimated 40% of this gold is illegally sourced. (Reporting and Additional Reporting by Anthony Marina, Writing by Natalia Siniawski, Editing by Brendan O'Boyle & Lincoln Feast.

(source: Reuters)