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Workers attempting to stop the flow of  oil in the Cuninico River in September 2022 following the spill
Workers attempting to stop the flow of oil in the Cuninico River in September following the spill. Photograph: Petroperu/AFP/Getty Images
Workers attempting to stop the flow of oil in the Cuninico River in September following the spill. Photograph: Petroperu/AFP/Getty Images

Indigenous people in Peruvian Amazon detain tourists in oil spill protest

This article is more than 1 year old

About 70 people seized in protest at environmental damage from crude oil spillage into Cuninico River

Indigenous people in the Amazon in Peru have detained a group of Peruvian and foreign tourists, including UK and US citizens, in protest at a lack of government aid following an oil spill in the area.

“[We want] to call the government’s attention with this action, There are foreigners and Peruvians, there are about 70 people,” Watson Trujillo, the leader of the Cuninico community, told RPP radio.

French, Spanish and Swiss citizens are also among the detained tourists, who were held while travelling on a river boat.

Trujillo said his group had taken the “radical measure” in an effort to put pressure on the government to send a delegation to assess the environmental damage from the spillage of 2,500 tons of crude oil into the Cuninico River on 16 September.

The detainees would spend the night inside the vessel while awaiting a solution to the situation, he added. Trujillo said he would return to the boat on Friday to consider whether to release them.

One Briton on board, Charlotte Wiltshire, sent a message to the BBC to say conditions were “starting to deteriorate” as they were beginning to run out of food and water.

She called for an “intervention” to rescue them, adding there were pregnant, elderly and sick people among those detained.

The government and police did not comment on the incident, which took place on a tributary of the Marañón River.

Indigenous communities had already been blocking the transit of all vessels on the river in protest against the spill, which was caused by a rupture in the Norperuano oil pipeline.

On 27 September, the government declared a 90-day state of emergency in the region, which is home to the Cuninico and Urarinas communities and where about 2,500 indigenous people live.

The 800km-long Norperuano pipeline, owned by the state-owned Petroperu, was built four decades ago to transport crude oil from the Amazon region to Piura, on the coast.

According to Petroperu, the spill was the result of an intentional 21cm cut in the pipeline.

More on this story

More on this story

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  • Anglo-French oil firm threatens Amazon reserve for isolated Indigenous people

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