Indigenous people in Peruvian Amazon detain tourists in protest against oil spill
BOGOTA, Colombia (AA) – A group of tourists on a river boat in the Peruvian Amazon have been detained since Thursday by an Indigenous group as part of a protest against a recent oil spill.
Local media reported that at least 150 tourists are being held hostage in the Maranon River, in the province of Cuninico, by locals seeking to draw the government’s attention after an oil spill.
The president of the Cuninico community, Watson Trujillo, said that the measure was taken to “call the attention of the government” to assess the environmental damage from the spillage of 2,500 tons of crude oil into the river caused by a rupture in a pipeline.
The Indigenous community wants the presence of the President of Peru, Pedro Castillo, as they say that some 2,500 people living on the banks of the river are unable to feed themselves or drink the water because it is contaminated.
The fuel leak was reported in September, when four workers of the state-owned company Petroperu were kidnapped and later released.
There are people from France, Switzerland, Germany, Spain, Brazil and the United Kingdom among the detained tourists held while traveling on a boat.
The Peruvian government has not made any official statements on the situation.