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An indigenous leader in Peru claims that illegal miners in the Amazon use children as "human shields".

On Monday, the leader of a Peruvian indigenous community asked the government to declare an emergency and accused illegal miner of using children in the Amazon as "human shields".

He will ask that the Peruvian Government declare an emergency in the region to allow for the eviction illegal miners.

Teofilo Kukush, the president of the Wampis, a community in the Amazonian region on the border with Ecuador told the local radio station RPP that "they use children between the ages of 5 and 10 as human shields" when they take action against illegal miner.

Kukush claimed that miners "incentivize" local residents by paying them and, when authorities attempt to conduct armed raids on the area, the miners put children in front the dredges used to extract gold from the river.

The government officials who were contacted about the complaint did not respond immediately. In the last two years, there have been at least 30 deaths from clashes or attacks on mines.

In July last year, a land rights activist from the indigenous community was found dead. Indigenous leaders have said that dozens of local heads were murdered in conflicts with miners and loggers, as well as drug traffickers.

Customs, according to the local financial regulator, Superintendency of Banking, Insurance and Private Pensions, reported that between January and October last year, $1.096 billion was spent on illegal mining operations.

According to official data, Peru produced 108 millions grams of fine gold by 2024. This is 6.9% more than in the previous year. Nearly half was supplied by small-scale mines.

According to the government, 85,000 artisanal miners are registered, with most coming from remote and poor areas. However, only 20% have formal permits.

Rest of the operators operate illegally or with suspended permits on land owned by formal companies. (Reporter Marco Aquino, Writing by Alexander Villegas, Editing by Aurora Ellis).

(source: Reuters)