After learning that they would be excluded from an official state of emergency declared in the wake of two catastrophic oil spills in the Peruvian Amazon, members of the Wampis community of Mayuriaga stopped a helicopter from taking off late Sunday evening and held 8 officials hostage to force the government to respond to their desperate pleas for help.
More than a month after the spills devastated many Indigenous communities’ water supplies, there is little end in sight to the suffering of those most affected.
“Though officials refer to the second leak as ‘the Mayuriaga spill’ because it took place in Mayuriaga,” Reuters reported, “the government did not include the community in an official list of affected groups that would receive emergency supplies and attention.”
The official state of emergency was declared by the central government on February 29th. The spills contaminated the food and water supplies of 20 communities, a local Indigenous group reported, but the central government initially offered emergency assistance to only 16.
“This oil spill has already resulted in severe and irreparable harm to the community lands of Mayuriaga and to our collective territory as a people. Responsibility lies squarely with [the oil company] Petroperu, who have acted with complete negligence,” Wrays Perez Ramirez, who was elected president of the Wampis after they formed a government last November, told RT. “Over more than 40 years they have failed to maintain and repair their pipeline knowing full well that it needs constant maintenance and replacement every 10-15 years.”
The grounded helicopter belonged to the Peruvian military, and it was transporting government and Petroperu officials to the region to inspect the damage from the spills.
Reuters reports:
The government will amend the emergency decree, published last month, to include Mayuriaga, said Deputy Culture Minister Patricia Balbuena.
Balbuena said a local government compiled the list and it was not clear why it excluded Mayuriaga.