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Indian protests threaten northern Peru oil output
19 Oct 2006 16:52:41 GMT
Source: Reuters

LIMA, Peru, Oct 19 (Reuters) - Peru Indians armed with bows, arrows and rifles continued to block oil production at Argentine crude producer Pluspetrol on Thursday as the government warned of fuel shortages in the jungle region.

Pluspetrol shut down its 50,000 barrel-per-day oil output in Peru's northern jungle on Tuesday after Achuar Indians took over four oil wells, complaining that crude production is damaging the environment.

"If this continues, the region won't have fuel for vehicles or for electricity generation," Energy and Mines Minister Juan Valdivia told CPN radio. The Loreto region is home to Peru's largest jungle city, Iquitos, a popular destination for foreign tourists on visits to the Amazon basin.

Health ministry official Fausto Roncal told Reuters last week that tests showed environmental damage close to oil wells was killing fish, the nutritional source of the communities.

Pluspetrol, which was not immediately available for comment, says the damage is from old, abandoned oil wells and not from its operations. The company says it is working with the government and local communities to clean river water and develop projects such as fish farms.

The Indians in a statement called for negotiations with the government in Lima to stop "the 1.3 million barrels of contaminated water pouring into the rivers every day."

Valdivia said the government was willing to hold talks with the Indians to hear their grievances, but not while they were armed. "We can't do that while they are threatening us with rifles, arrows and wearing war face paint," Valdivia said.

Pluspetrol is one of Argentina's biggest natural gas producers and leads a consortium pumping gas from Peru's huge Camisea field, one of the biggest reserves in South America.
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An environmental activist walks past a inflatable mock smokestack reading "Botnia out" placed in front of Argentina's government house during a campaign against the construction of Finnish pulp mill Botnia in Buenos Aires, December 12, 2006. Residents of the Argentine tourist town of Gualeguaychu have blocked a main bridge leading to Uruguay during many weekends this year to protest the construction of the $1 billion pulp plant, which can be seen on the other side of the River Uruguay. The Argentine government is concerned about contamination and the plant's impact on tourism and fishing, while Uruguay insists the project is environmentally safe.