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Peru Congress reverses procedure fought by small gold miners

Peru's Congress has knocked down legislation that threatened to shut down countless smallscale mine operations, a move that comes after days of strong protests from artisanal miners in the significant gold manufacturer and international No. 2 copper producing nation.

In a plenary session on Wednesday night, the legislature annulled a federal government step applied late in 2015 that set a. March 21 due date for small miners to provide a valid. mining agreement or mining concession, otherwise they would be. gotten rid of from a national program to formalize little mining. operations.

Peru has actually for years been trying to formalize small-scale gold. miners, in the middle of growing worldwide pressure to shed light on the. supply chain of the precious metal in South America's top. producer. Tensions with huge copper miners had also been increasing.

The legislation had actually also approved police more powers to act. versus small artisanal mines where there was proof of. unlawful belongings of explosives, in the middle of reports by authorities of. clashes and attacks by unlawful miners that have actually left more than. twenty individuals dead in the last two years.

Victor Gobitz, president of the SNMPE union of official. private miners, said the ruling was a disastrous spur of the. minute decision which he stated would motivate mining criminal offenses. He. called on the federal government to remember.

Small gold miners in Peru typically run unlawfully or. with little oversight. They have been spreading into copper also. as prices of the red metal have actually climbed up.

Peru produced 99.7 million great grams of gold in 2023, 2.8%. higher than the previous year. Artisan mines extract around 40%. of the mineral, according to the federal government, while industry. representatives claim that figure stands at 50%.

If this law is not reversed, we will go on strike and. protest forever, Maximo Becker, president of the National. Confederation of Small Miners and Artisanal Miners of Peru. ( Confemin), informed this week at a demonstration.

The leader said that his union groups some 500,000. small miners in the nation, while about 85,000 are. registered for the formalization program, known as REINFO.

REINFO has actually stopped working, stated Gobitz, arguing the program helped. many small miners to formalize however likewise permitted illegal miners. to get into formal concessions.

Gobitz is also president of Antamina mining,. Peru's second-largest copper producer managed by Glencore. , BHP, Teck and Japan's Mitsubishi .

Mining is crucial to Peru's economy, with 60% of the Andean. country's exports coming from the mining sector, mainly copper.

(source: Reuters)