Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Perenco takes its hunt for black gold to the depths of Peru's rainforest

The mosquitoes carry malaria – but the sand flies are even worse. If one of these flying horrors bites you, there's a strong chance of catching flesh-eating bug leishmaniasis – and you really don't want that.


Perenco is doing all it can to prevent environmental problems from its oil exploration in the Amazon
Even worse, it's 95 degrees Fahrenheit and the humidity is stifling, but the disease-carrying insects mean you have to dress head to toe in thick, impenetrable clothing to be sure you don't end up as lunch.

Imagine having to work a 12-hour manual shift at a drill rig under these conditions, seven days a week for six weeks in a row. This is the reality of oil exploration today. Most of the world's easy oil was pumped long ago and energy companies have to go to the frontiers of human endurance in order to get the job done.

From the deep oceans off Brazil, to the frozen tundra of Siberia – oil companies are testing the limits of engineering and project management to sate our unquenchable thirst for black gold. But, as can be expected in the oil industry, none of this is without controversy.

Deep in the Peruvian Amazon, Franco-British oil group Perenco is drilling three wells in an area that could produce up to 100,000 barrels of oil a day.

The Amazon has become synonymous with environmental destruction all over the world and any sort of activity will stoke the ire of even the mildest of environmentalists. Oil exploration is near the top of the eco-warriors' hit list. It's dirty, requires masses of equipment and any spill or mishap can cause significant and long-lasting environmental problems. So should it be allowed at all?

"Europeans should concentrate on reducing their own CO₂ emissions instead of telling Peru what to do," says Antonia Brack, Peru's charismatic and plain-speaking environment minister, echoing the view of other developing nations expressed in Copenhagen last week. "It is our forest and we can look after it ourselves.

"There are activities that are more damaging than oil exploration, such as migratory agriculture and alluvial gold mining." This, he says, destroys 150,000 hectares of forest a year, compared with the 7.5 hectares that have been cleared for Perenco's drilling.

The problem for Peru is that it has to import almost 150,000 barrels of oil every day. The costs involved in this are a massive strain on its fledgling economy. After the 2008 oil price spike, energy security is high on the agenda for every country in the world, so why should a country remain impoverished if it has the resources to meet its own needs and generate those
all-important petrodollars to fund its growth? That is the clear message of the Peruvian authorities.

Perenco's operations are in the Loretto region of Peru. This vast area is mostly rainforest, with its administrative centre in Iquitos on the Amazon River.

Ivan Enrique Valera is president of the Loretta region. From his offices in Iquitos he pays close attention to all the companies operating in the area.

When The Daily Telegraph met Mr Valera late one evening, he had just returned from inspecting a drilling programme in the south of Loretto to make sure all water was being injected back into the well and not being discharged into the environment. He is vocal about the importance of drilling for oil in region.

"The Amazon should not be maintained as a museum," he argued. "Those who think it should can come over here and pay for the development of the people."

The royalty revenues generated from licences and oil production are going to significantly help the country develop. In Iquitos alone, Mr Valera plans to completely rebuild the City's sewerage system and rebuild all its roads with the money it generates – and 90pc of the funding for this plan will come from oil revenues.

The oil industry is also becoming a major employer in the region. Of the 900,000 people who live in Loretto, Peru's largest administrative region, about 10,000 are employed directly by the oil industry. With an average family of five people, about 50,000 individuals rely on the oil industry for their income.

Iquitos is said to be the largest City in the world that is completely inaccessible by road. You have to fly in from the capital Lima or spend weeks sailing up the Amazon tributaries to reach it. This has created a logistical nightmare for Perenco.

To protect the forest, no roads have been constructed to the site. All of the equipment is shipped on the Amazon and its tributaries to a logistics base cleared at the side of the river. A fleet of helicopters is based at the site to ferry all personnel and equipment to the drill sites. The logistics have to be timed to perfection as it takes about a month to get equipment shipped up the river. Company staff are flown in on a seaplane.

Each of the three drill sites has been cleared of trees, but they are not much larger than a football field, at 2.5 hectares each. The forest floor has been lined with heavy duty plastic to prevent potential spills leaking into the ground and the company will inject any water that is pumped from their operations back into the reservoir.

The company is doing all it can to prevent any environmental problems, but as Shell has learnt in Nigeria, if the indigenous people feel their home is being exploited it can lead to conflict.

Father Ricardo Alvarez, a Dominican friar now living at a monastery in Lima, has spent more than half a century living with indigenous communities in the Amazon, working more than 20 years ago as a liaison between local communities and oil companies such as Royal Dutch Shell and Total. He is cautiously positive about the future of the forest and its people. However, he believes that oil companies need to learn from past mistakes in order to keep local people on side.

"When oil companies first came to the Amazon more than 20 years ago, no politicians were involved and Shell dealt directly with the local people, says Fr Ricardo Alvarez. "Engineers came in and built schools for the local people and taught them all about the local oil industry."

This then stopped as politicians started to get involved in the process. "In my 57 years in the forest I saw indigenous people marginalised," says Fr Alvarez. "The key to the future is exploration not exploitation."

He believes oil companies need to establish a dialogue with native people, eliminate their marginalisation by helping to provide social services and education. He also believes engineers from large cities need to make sure they are fully briefed on the history and cultural aspects of the people in the local area. "A lack of proper community relations is what creates the problem," he says.

Perenco has certainly learnt lessons from the priest. It has rebuilt and refurbished a hospital boat for the area that will constantly sail around the Amazon tributaries in the area and provide medical and dental care for communities.

As oil companies generate profits local people need to feel the benefits too. "That's the only way it will work", says Fr Alvarez. Perenco's model appears to be working well, with government ministers, the regional president and the local community fully behind what they are doing.

Of course, it is early days. A pipeline needs to be constructed to take the oil out and there is plenty of scope for an accident that could be environmentally destructive. But the development of fledgling economies will not stop – and, as Fr Alvarez says "rich Westeners with their polluting ways are in no position to lecture the people of Peru over what they can do."

Source:telegraph.co.uk/

CHILE’S RELATIONS WITH PERU NORMAL

LIMA, Dec 22 (NNN-ANDINA) – Chile?s Foreign Minister, Mariano Fernandez, said today that the relations with Peru are ?normal? but not much progress due to some ?incidents?.

He said that Chile is investigating the espionage case reported by Peru and when there is more information they will send an answer.

?Our relation with Peru is normal. Regarding commerce, businesses and investments we keep an itinerary and in other subjects we have collaboration that won?t allow us to have very creative initiatives like we had with other countries,? he added.

Commenting on the Chilean foreign policy this year, he said that these facts have prevented them from having creative initiatives like the ones with Argentina, Bolivia or other countries, ?since we were sued, and we don?t think that is good?.

Fernandez said ?regarding trade and businesses we keep a clear itinerary with Peru. Chilean investments in Peru are important, the Peruvian investments are growing and we hope to cooperate in other matters”, he said. — NNN-ANDINA

Source:world.brunei.fm/

Nolberto Solano on trial at Colchester United


Nolberto Solano has joined Colchester United on a week's trial. Photograph: Scott Heppell/AP

Nolberto Solano is undergoing a trial this week at Colchester United as the club's manager, Aidy Boothroyd, considers offering a contract to the former Newcastle United and Aston Villa midfielder.

The 35-year-old Peru international, who had a 23-game spell with West Ham and a season with Larissa in Greece's Super League after leaving St James' Park in 2007, currently plays for the Peruvian champions Universitario de Deportes.

"We can attract players like Nobby now, we'll see how it pans out," Boothroyd told the BBC. "I tried to sign him for Watford but he went off to America. He now plays for a team in Peru who have just won the championship there and I asked him to come over and see if he's still got what he had and to see if he likes us.

"I suppose it is a bit of a date that we're having at the moment. As is usually the case you don't get married on a first date, you've got to go out a few times before you make any big decisions."

Source:guardian.co.uk/

Peru to Grow 5.5% in 2010, 2011, Central Bank Says


Dec. 21 (Bloomberg) -- Peru’s economic growth may accelerate to 5.5 percent annually in 2010 and 2011 after gross domestic product grows 1 percent this year, the central bank said.

GDP will expand at a faster pace next year because of the government’s economic stimulus plan and a recovery in private- sector spending, the bank said in a report on its Web site.

Annual inflation may quicken gradually in “the coming months,” reaching the bank’s 1 percent to 3 percent target range during the second half of 2010, the report said. The bank said it doesn’t expect to alter its reference rate from its current 1.25 percent unless there is a significant change in the outlook for inflation.

Pushing borrowing costs to a record low has allowed interest rates in the financial system to fall, boosting credit to companies and homebuyers, the report said. Long-term interest rates on government bonds have also fallen, the report said.

The sol was little changed at 2.8840 per dollar at 11:20 a.m. New York time from 2.8835 on Dec. 18.

To contact the reporters on this story: John Quigley in Lima at jquigley8@bloomberg.net

Source:bloomberg.com/

Nine killed in Peru landslide

LIMA - The toll from a landslide brought on by torrential rains in southern Peru has risen to nine dead and 25 wounded, the prime minister said Thursday, with more heavy rains forecast for the days ahead.

The victims died when the rains unleashed a torrent of mud and rock in the streets of Ayacucho, where nearly 100 homes were destroyed and the city's sewer system was paralyzed when the downtown was coated in a thick layer of mud.

The victims included four men and two women whose car was buried by the flood of mud and debris in the city center on Wednesday night.

Hundreds of people were in need of relocation as part of the city remained under threat of further mudslides, with rains forecast for later this week, Prime Minister Javier Velasquez said from the site, according to the official Andina news agency.

Source;newsinfo.inquirer.net/

Friday, December 4, 2009

Violence erupts again over Chinese mine in Peru

LIMA (Reuters) - Two people were killed and eight were injured in a shootout on Wednesday as Peruvian police tried to arrest a suspect for attacking a mining project owned by Chinese company Zijin, police said on Thursday.

World

Authorities said they arrested two suspects for the assault in November that killed three workers at the Rio Blanco copper development, but were fired upon as they tried to arrest a third suspect.

Zijin's $1.4 billion Rio Blanco project has locked local communities and companies in a bitter environmental dispute marred by violence.

It has also put pressure on President Alan Garcia, whose approval rating is just 26 percent, to find a balance between luring foreign investment to oil and mining projects and protecting the environment.

"We were trying to arrest those responsible for what happened in November ... and we were attacked by bullets and rocks while trying to catch one suspect. We responded in legitimate defense," General Walter Rivera told Reuters.

Rivera, who said police and civilians were among the wounded, said the suspect escaped during the shootout.

David Velazco, a lawyer for the victims, said police used excessive force. He said police were serving warrants for eight suspects in the November attack, but there were no warrants out for the arrest of the two peasants killed on Wednesday.

"The peasants didn't shoot anybody. They don't have arms, only arrows or maybe some rocks," he said.

The company declined comment.

The government of Peru, a leading global minerals exporter, said it would investigate and that violence must stop.

"We won't permit chaos. We'll use all the tools the Constitution gives us to guarantee security and (prevent) attacks on public and private property," said Prime Minister Javier Velasquez.

HISTORY OF VIOLENCE

The Rio Blanco development, 500 miles north of Lima, Peru's capital, is run by Monterrico Metals of Britain, which was bought by Zijin in 2007.

In 2005, one protester was killed and two dozen were beaten when townspeople mobilized against the mine, which they said would cause pollution and hurt water supplies.

In Britain, rights groups have filed a lawsuit against Monterrico over the 2005 clash.

Last month, 15 to 20 gunmen invaded the mining camp and set it ablaze.

Politicians have called it revenge for the 2005 clash or the work of drug traffickers. Rivera said he has yet to assign a motive for the attack, even though suspects were identified.

Garcia's administration often tries to hurt the credibility of environmental groups by taking them to court or calling them terrorists. Human rights groups say he tries to play on the fears of Peruvians who remember the leftist insurgencies of the 1980s and 1990s.

An independent arm of the government that tracks social conflicts recently said that communities nationwide have organized to block 103 new mines or oil wells.

In June, three dozen people died near the town of Bagua, in Peru's northern jungle, as police broke up roadblocks set by indigenous groups opposed to oil exploration on their ancestral lands.

Despite frequent conflicts over natural resources, Chinese miners Chinalco and Minmetals have also been investing in Peru.

Together, Chinese companies hungry for resources have pledged to invest at least $6 billion Peru's mining sector.

Zijin's mine, which would churn out some 200,000 tons of copper concentrate a year, was supposed to open in 2011 but has faced repeated delays.

Source: reuters.com/

Peru's per capita GDP sees record high growth

LIMA, Dec. 3 (Xinhua) -- Peru's gross domestic product (GDP) per capita grew 3.8 percent from 2002 through 2009, Peruvian Economy and Finance Minister Liu Carranza said Thursday.

Noting that this represents a record high growth in the past seven decades, he said that Peru's economy is "reverting and reaching the per capita level of many countries in the region."

He made the remarks at the release ceremony of "Doing Business 2010," the seventh in a series of annual reports issued by the World Bank. The reports examine regulations worldwide that enhance or hinder business activities.

Carranza said that at the beginning of 2000, Peru's GDP per capita was 50 percent lower than Brazil, but now the gap is 20 percent, so is the case of Mexico and Colombia, with the gaps narrowed to 10 percent and 7 percent respectively.

Peru has succeeded in keeping inflation rates lower than world average and maintaining a stable environment for development. Asa result, public debt in Peru has reduced by 25 percent within nearly 10 years, comparing with 60 percent at the beginning of 1990, he said.

This enabled Peru not only to yield positive data records, but also acquire a low volatility in the market, thus reducing possible turbulence of the relative prices,

"In other words, it helps lower interest and long-term accessible rates, which has a fundamental impact in private investment," Carranza added.

Source: xinhuanet.com/

Peru, U.S. review military cooperation agenda

LIMA, Dec. 3 (Xinhua) -- High-level military officers from Peru and the United States evaluated Thursday the bilateral military cooperation agenda for 2010.

The meeting was held between chief of the Joint Command of the Peruvian Armed Forces, General Francisco Contreras, and chief of the U.S. Southern Command, General Douglas Fraser.

According to a statement, priorities on the agenda include the fight against drug trafficking and terrorism, the training of Peruvian troops, and other security support.

Fraser pledged continued successful humanitarian missions, mainly on medical assistance in Peru's poor regions.

Also present at the meeting were Peruvian commander general of the Army, General Otto Guibovich, Admiral of the Navy, Rolando Navarrete, and chief of the General Staff of the Air Force, General Carlos Samame.

Source: xinhuanet.com/

Chinese naval fleet makes goodwill port call in Peru

LIMA, Dec. 3 (Xinhua) -- A Chinese destroyer and a support vessel on Thursday arrived at Callo for a goodwill port call and a friendly visit.

The Peruvian commander of surface forces of the army, Commander Edmundo Deville, was at the Callo Port to welcome the visiting Chinese navy servicemen, led by Major General Wang Fushan, vice-commander of the North Sea Fleet of the Chinese People's Liberation Army Navy.

The Chinese navy officer, who will meet Pevuvian Navy Commander Admiral Rolando Navarrete, described the port call and visit as one aimed at strengthening friendship, consolidating mutual understanding and expanding bilateral cooperation so as to build a harmonious Pacific Ocean.

The Chinese warships arrived in Peru from Chile.

Source: xinhuanet.com/

Peru's Main Stock Indexes End Lower; Sol Strengthens

LIMA (Dow Jones)--Peru's main stock market indexes ended lower Thursday as weak metals prices dragged down various mining company shares.

The Lima Stock Exchange's broad General index ended 0.95% lower at 14273.64.

The Selective blue-chip index ended 1.18% weaker at 23123.05.

The mining subindex fell 1.03%.

Precious metals miner Compania de Minas Buenaventura SAA (BUENAVC1.Vl) weakened 3.3% to end at 115.50 soles ($40.17) as gold prices eased.

Copper miner Sociedad Minera Cerro Verde SAA(CVERDEC1.VL) lost 0.4% to end at $23.55 as copper prices eased, while base metals miner Southern Copper Corp. (PCU) declined 3.5% to end at $34.95.

Peru's sol strengthened a bit, ending at PEN2.875 per U.S. dollar.

The sol ended the previous session at PEN2.880 per U.S. dollar.

The Central Reserve Bank of Peru didn't intervene in the foreign exchange market.

So far this year the sol has strengthened by 8.32% against the greenback.

Source: wsj.com/

UPDATE 2-Violence erupts again over Chinese mine in Peru

* Two die, eight injured in shootout

* Peru has bitter conflicts over natural resources (Adds quotes, background)

By Terry Wade and Teresa Cespedes

LIMA, Dec 3 (Reuters) - Two people were killed and eight were injured in a shootout on Wednesday as Peruvian police tried to arrest a suspect for attacking a mining project owned by Chinese company Zijin, police said on Thursday.

Authorities said they arrested two suspects for the assault in November that killed three workers at the Rio Blanco copper development, but were fired upon as they tried to arrest a third suspect.

Zijin's $1.4 billion Rio Blanco project has locked local communities and companies in a bitter environmental dispute marred by violence.

It has also put pressure on President Alan Garcia, whose approval rating is just 26 percent, to find a balance between luring foreign investment to oil and mining projects and protecting the environment.

"We were trying to arrest those responsible for what happened in November ... and we were attacked by bullets and rocks while trying to catch one suspect. We responded in legitimate defense," General Walter Rivera told Reuters.

Rivera, who said police and civilians were among the wounded, said the suspect escaped during the shootout.

David Velazco, a lawyer for the victims, said police used excessive force. He said police were serving warrants for eight suspects in the November attack, but there were no warrants out for the arrest of the two peasants killed on Wednesday.

"The peasants didn't shoot anybody. They don't have arms, only arrows or maybe some rocks," he said.

The company declined comment.

The government of Peru, a leading global minerals exporter, said it would investigate and that violence must stop.

"We won't permit chaos. We'll use all the tools the Constitution gives us to guarantee security and (prevent) attacks on public and private property," said Prime Minister Javier Velasquez.

HISTORY OF VIOLENCE

The Rio Blanco development, 500 miles (800 km) north of Lima, Peru's capital, is run by Monterrico Metals of Britain, which was bought by Zijin (601899.SS: 行情)(2899.HK: 行情) in 2007.

In 2005, one protester was killed and two dozen were beaten when townspeople mobilized against the mine, which they said would cause pollution and hurt water supplies.

In Britain, rights groups have filed a lawsuit against Monterrico over the 2005 clash.

Last month, 15 to 20 gunmen invaded the mining camp and set it ablaze.

Politicians have called it revenge for the 2005 clash or the work of drug traffickers. Rivera said he has yet to assign a motive for the attack, even though suspects were identified.

Source: reuters.com/

Peru bank robbery trial postponed

A bank robbery trial was postponed Thursday, but attorneys in the case said they are close to an agreement with one of the two men charged in the Sept. 4 robbery of Peru Federal Savings Bank.
Richard M. Rigg, 53, of Rock Island and Chad R. Diederich, 36, of Carbon Cliffs were scheduled for trial Monday for aggravated robbery, a Class 1 felony carrying 4-15 years in prison.
The trial was postponed, however, after attorneys announced that Rigg could be close to a plea agreement. Diederich, unhappy with public defender Tim Cappellini, said she hopes to hire a new lawyer.
Both men will appear Dec. 17 for separate status hearings. New trial dates are pending.
Diederich allegedly entered Peru Federal Savings Bank on Shooting Park Road in Peru and presented a note to the teller asking for money.
He was holding what was believed to be a weapon, prosecutors said, but the still-missing “weapon” is believed to have been a toy gun purchased from Walgreen’s before the robbery.
State police apprehended the suspects 20 minutes later on Interstate 80 in Ottawa, as they attempted to get away in a blue passenger car driven by Rigg. Police recovered more than $5,000 and traced part of the funds to Peru Federal.
Bond remains set at $250,000. Each needs to post $25,000 in cash to be released. Diederich is eligible for an extended term of up to 30 years, due to a previous Class 1 felony conviction.
Bank robbery is a crime subject to federal as well as state prosecution. However, La Salle County state’s attorney Brian Towne said he conferred with the FBI and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Illinois. All parties, he said, agreed that Towne would try the suspects first; the feds have reserved the right to prosecute them later.

Attorneys also agreed to continue the Monday trial of a Peru man charged with child pornography.
Fredrick G. Kubberness, 41, of 609 Rock St., could face 2-5 years in prison if convicted of two counts of child pornography, a Class 3 felony. Due to a witness problem, the trial was moved to Feb. 1. He will next appear Jan. 28.
Prosecutors indicated that Kubberness possessed at least two sexually explicit images of a person that he should have known was a child. He is not charged with producing or manufacturing any pornography.

Source: newstrib.com/

Peru police say 2 die in clash near Chinese mine

LIMA (Reuters) - Two people were killed and eight were injured Wednesday as Peruvian police sought to apprehend a suspect in the November attack on a mining camp owned by Chinese miner Zijin, police said Thursday.

Authorities said they have arrested two suspects for the November assault that killed three workers at the controversial Rio Blanco copper project, which has polarized local communities and foreign investors. (Reporting by Terry Wade and Teresa Cespedes)


Source: forbes.com/

Norwegian company to build hydro power plant in Peru


Peru's government signed a concession agreement with the Norwegian company SN Power, for the construction of a hydroelectric plant in the north of Lima region, reported the Energy and Mines ministry.

SN Power will invest about US $300 million in the construction of this hydroelectric plant, whose construction is to start in 2010 and is expected to be operational in July 2014; reportedly, the plant will generate 168 new megawatts as of 2014, which will help to reaffirm Peru's status as a great energy provider.

"It's very important to increase the energy capacity of Peru, which following Norwey's example and its hydroenergy development, aims to become a great provider of electric energy in South America,” said Peru's President Alan García.

The Peruvian president said that in 2011, by the time he leaves office, Peru will have increased its power generation by 50%.

Source: livinginperu.com/

Peru RV maker expanding

Updated: Wednesday, 02 Dec 2009, 9:51 PM EST
Published : Wednesday, 02 Dec 2009, 9:51 PM EST

PERU, Ind. (AP) - A northern Indiana RV company is expanding and more than tripling its jobs.


Riverside Travel Trailer in Peru took over the former Adventure Manufacturing factory in June.

By the middle of next year, the company says it will double its workforce.

All other new jobs will be added by 2011, making a possible total of around 100 jobs.

Officials say the company will spend more than a million dollars on new equipment as the RV industry is entering an economic recovery phase.

Source: wane.com/

Peru: Puerto Maldonado will held First Photo Exhibition on Indigenous Peoples


Puerto Maldonado, the capital city of Madre de Dios will held the First Photographic Exhibition About Indigenous Peoples of Madre de Dios 2009, organized by the Native Federation of Madre de Dios (FENAMAD) as part of the celebrations in the anniversary of Madre de Dios region, between December 1oth and 27th.

These photographs have been collected since years ago, and probably the most significant ones are the old photos dating from the 40s and 50s, the period when the Dominican missions contacted the Harakmbut people who were living in isolation until then.

Another group of photographs were taken by Tobias Schneebaum, who lived in the 50s (during seven years) in a native Harakmbut community . Another set of photos provides an overview of life in the current times for the natives.

The exhibition, to be held at INC in Puerto Maldonado, will showcase a total of 30 photographs depicting the past and present of the indigenous communities living in the Amazonian basin of Madre de Dios.

The region is home of 33 native communities from seven ethno-linguistic groups: Yine, Matsiguenka, Harakmbut, Ese Eja, Amahuaca, Kichua Runa and Shipibo.

Source: livinginperu.com/

Peru tribe threatened by hepatitis

The Candoshi tribe in Peru's Amazon region has said their existence is threatened by a hepatitis B outbreak that began almost two decades ago.

A health emergency has now been declared in the area to tackle the epidemic.

Venancio Ucama Simon, the head of the tribe, said his people began contracting the disease around 1990 and members are dying because they have not received treatment.

"My people are suffering, we're in real danger of extinction," Ucama said on Wednesday.

Gianina Lucana, a Candoshi nurse working for the World Wildlife Fund (WWF), said that "so far, 80 people have died from hepatitis B since 2000" in her region.

She said the disease broke out when Occidental Petroleum Corporation was granted exploration rights in the remote northern Datem del Maranon Province.

Insufficient statistics

Lack of reliable data has made it difficult to determine how many people have been infected with hepatitis B, Lucana said. The latest statistics, in 2000, suggested there were 169 cases.

"From that time to now, however, things have deteriorated badly. There have been lots of deaths apparently from hepatitis B, but it's been impossible to determine exactly how many because of lack of medical attention," she said.

The Candoshi population is currently estimated to number 2,400 people.

A health emergency was declared in the area after Ucama and members of his tribe travelled to the capital, Lima, to draw attention to their case.

"We will guarantee permanent human and economic resources to launch a massive inoculation drive against that disease," Oscar Ugarte, Peru's health minister, said.

The tribe leader said the epidemic is also threatening to wipe out other indigenous groups, including the Shapra, Awajun, Achuar and Huambisa, all living in Peru's north.

Ucama said that federal and local health authorities were trading blame for the plight of the Candoshi and citing the high cost of hepatitis B treatment as a reason for the inattention.

The Candoshi tribe has its homeland in a wetland ecosystem and lives off of sustainable fishing

The tribe is known for its conservationist culture, which the WWF said has helped restore Amazon wildlife around lake Rimachi.

Source: aljazeera.net/

Outbreak of Newcastle disease in Peru

The Ag authorities of Peru reported an outbreak of Newcastle disease in 31 birds in Ancash.
Clinical signs with neurological symptoms were reported on November 2. Subsequent inspection of properties in the outbreak area did not reveal clinical disease cases amongst backyard and fighting birds.

Commercial poultry farms are not present in the outbreak area, they are approximately at a 280 km distance from the quarantined zone.

Presently, a vaccination campaign is being conducted in the outbreak area, around the outbreak and in the buffer zone. Commercial poultry farms in the coastal area of the district are under surveillance by SENASA.

Source: vetsweb.com/

Getting Puno With It In The Folklore Capital Of Peru


Though I didn't plan it, I arrived to Puno, called the folklore capital of Peru, on the eve of its anniversary day. In a region that lays claims to 4,000 distinct traditional dances, you better believe there was some fierce dancing. From 2-9 p.m. the next day, Puno elementary and high schools performed choreographed street parades in lavish costumes.

Puno is a port of Lake Titicaca and is way high up: 3,800 meters, or 2.3 miles. It was so high up that I had a headache upon arriving. After I found decent lodging (Hotel Arequipa, on Arequipa with Oquendo, has private rooms, a computer room with Internet and a clean, shared bathroom for 15 soles), my altitude problem seemed cured by a couple of coca leaf teas at a bar on Calle Lima.

In the morning, there was an impressive theatrical procession of the Incas. Legend has it that the Inca empire was founded by a couple that was born from Lake Titicaca. The royal couple comes back from the lake on Puno Day, carried on a platform by young men and throwing potatoes out to a large crowd.

The procession of servants in colorful one-piece garbs arrived to a stadium, where the royalty and shamans made long pronouncements in Quechua (Peru's official language along with Spanish) and Aymara. They were checking up on their descendants and praying for a good harvest, a Quechua-speaker explained to me.

Hundreds of indigenous Peruvians and plenty of camera-laden foreigners looked on while kids selling Coke yelled “Gaseosa!” along with other vendors. The hawking seemed kind of sacrilegious – I wonder if that type of behavior was allowed at 14th century Inca ceremonies. The ceremony ended with the sacrifice of a llama, whose blood was drunk by the royal couple. (Ed. Note: Llama blood??)





Then began the never-ending street parade, each group of school kids with spectacular matching outfits and a loud brass band trailing behind. (Again, this was no ordinary Thursday – it was Puno Day. The next large celebration is the Fiesta de la Candelaria starting February 2. People start rehearsing for those traditional dances months prior.)

I ducked into the Museo de la Coca. Coca leaves are the main ingredient of cocaine, of course, but in Puno and many highland regions of the Andes, it was used in Precolombian times – and still is used – for religious ceremonies, medical purposes, and as a mild stimulant. Basically a miracle leaf (it did help my altitude acclimation, I think). Coca's now mostly chewed on by campesinos trying to stay awake in their fields and it's legal to grow, sell and buy in Peru. I bought a bag for one sol while in Cabanaconde.





Anyway, the Coca Museum is tiny, but has two interesting twenty-minute videos, one on coca and another about all those traditional Puno dances. It's only five soles to enter and worth the visit.

At night the dancing finally ended and tourists flocked to bars and restaurants on Calle Lima. It gets cold in Puno, in the low 40s so I settled for a hot coca leaf tea.

Source: jaunted.com/

Israeli hiker's body identified in Peru


An Israeli family from Rosh Pina is in mourning after hearing news Tuesday that the body of their son Omri Lahad, missing in South America for a month, was identified in a small town in rural Peru Monday night.

Lahad, 23, had apparently died from a snake bite while hiking alone in a jungle area near the Peru-Brazil border.

Lahad's body was found by local villagers nearly a month ago, but was only identified once search and rescue teams began circulating photos of Lahad in the area on Monday. Shortly thereafter, the body, which was being kept in a police station in a rural area near the border with Brazil, was identified by the leader of the Israeli search party.

Omri Lahad, who was known by his nickname "Kipi" by friends and loved ones, was traveling in South America as part of his post-IDF journey, a ritual almost universally practiced by young Israelis fresh out of army service.

His last-known whereabouts was the town of Leticia, Colombia, where he withdrew money from an ATM before heading off for the rainforest, as part of his plan to travel through the jungles of the Amazon River basin south to Bolivia.

Lahad's story has resonated with thousands of Israelis, and a Facebook "event" page started by friends and his sister Michal on November 25th had attracted nearly 10,000 members less than a week after it was formed.

The event page, called "HELP! I am looking for OMRI!!!", was filled with condolence messages after news of Lahad's death broke in Israel Tuesday.

Nearly a hundred thousand people had been invited to join the facebook event and on the main page, information was displayed on how to donate money to bank accounts opened by the Lahad family in New York and Israel to accept donations to assist in the search. The Lahads were trying to raise $60,000 in order to hire a helicopter for four days of jungle searches.

On Tuesday, A facebook group started in memory of Omri had over 1,900 members by Tuesday afternoon. In pictures uploaded to the facebook page, the blue-eyed, blond-haried Omri can be seen hiking and playing the guitar, smiling and surrounded by wide-open expanses of nature in Israel and Latin America.

The search for Omri was led by Hilik Magnus, a well-known organizer of search and rescue missions for Israelis abroad. Magnus set up his operation over 13 years ago and regularly assists families searching for loved ones missing or addicted to drugs abroad.

On Tuesday, in a rural police station near the Peru-Brazil border, Magnus identified the body of Omri and had to break the news to a family hoping for a happy ending to their weeks of worry and distraught.

Source: jpost.com/

Peru's Tax Collections End Downward Slide, Gain In November

LIMA (Dow Jones)--Peru's overall central government tax and customs collections have ended their slide, posting the first monthly increase this year in November, the government said.

Combined tax and customs collections rose a real 2.3% to 4.36 billion soles (US$1.52 billion) in November, the government's tax agency Sunat said Wednesday.

Tax collections posted a real gain of 9.7% in November to reach PEN3.86 billion, while customs revenue continued to decline in November, falling by 12.1% in real terms in November to PEN1.29 billion.

The overall number for collections can be less than the addition of tax revenue and customs revenue due to tax refunds.

Tax and customs collections have weakened alongside anemic economic growth in Peru this year.

The agency said that in the first 11 months of the year, tax collections were down a real 7.3% over the same month a year earlier to PEN41.37 billion. Customs collections in the same period were down a real 24.8% to PEN13.20 billion.

The Sunat said income tax collections rose in November, by a real 0.3% to PEN1.56 billion, while collections of the value-added tax, or IGV, were PEN2.58 billion, an increase of 1.4% in real terms from the previous year period.

Peru's gross domestic product contracted in the third quarter, but economists expect an expansion in the fourth quarter and into 2010.

Source: wsj.com/

Three films from Peru included in the "Best 100 Latin American Films" list


Films directed by Peruvians Claudia Llosa, Josue Mendez and Ricardo De Montreuil were included in the “The Best 100 films in Latin America” list.

The ranking was elaborated with data from a survey conducted by Cinema Tropical, an association dedicated to the promotion of Latin American cinema; the polled persons were critics, academics and professionals of this industry, based in New York.

Most of the films nominated in this list come from Argentina, Brazil and Mexico.

Three films with Peruvian directors have been included, too: “The Milk of Sorrow,” by Claudia Llosa; “Días de Santiago,” by Josue Mendez; and “La Mujer de mi hermano” by Ricardo de Montreuil.

Have other topics you'd like to see in our news section? If you or someone you know would like to contribute a news article to Living in Peru, whether it's translated or based on a personal investigation, send it to editor@livinginperu.com.

Source: livinginperu.com/

Peru Declares State of Emergency in Southern Province

The southern province of Abancay in Peru’s Apurímac region, known for copper and iron mines, is under police and military control to prevent further disruption from protesters who demand a greater share of the region’s budget. The state of emergency, declared Wednesday, will last for 60 days. Civil liberties have been suspended and public transportation is restricted in Abancay City, the region’s capital.

Protesters accuse David Salazar, president of the seven provinces in the Apurímac region, of allocating half of the region’s funds to the province of Andahuaylas, which has a historical rivalry with Abancay province.

On Nov. 20, clashes between police and union members who had gone on strike demanding the resignation of Salazar left 87 people injured. The Peruvian government fears the strikes and protests could effect mining operations in the region that are heavily backed by foreign capital. Total investment in Peru’s mines amounts to around $20 billion.

Peru's President of the Council of Ministers, Javier Velásquez Quesquén, said the protests are politically motivated. “We are not cutting the budget for Apurimac region. In fact it is increasing. The issue is the distribution, but even so, this is a political issue," he said.

mining, Peru, protests

Source: americasquarterly.org/