"We are fighting because we fear our land will be taken away," said Denis Tangoa, a protester at one blockade told Reuters news agency.
Fuel and transport blockades have disrupted Peru's Amazon region for almost two months.
The indigenous tribes want to force Congress to repeal new laws that encourage foreign mining in the rain forest.
"We are not going to give up until they reverse these laws that will damage us," Luis Huansi, a tribal leader told Reuters.
Sunday, June 7, 2009
Clashing and Curfews in Amazonas
Saturday, May 30, 2009
Indian Government Permits British Company to Mine Tribe's Sacred Mountain
Survival International has made a ten-minute film called "Mine: story of a sacred mountain" about the situation.The Niyamgiri Hills are home to more than 8,000 Dongria Kondh who "lead a self-sufficient life, nurturing the forest-covered region and relying on it for their food, culture, and medicines," writes ActionAid UK, an international development organization. "They also worship the mountain as their god."
"The mine would devastate the ecology of the region and spell the end of the Dongria Kondh's independent way of life, polluting the streams and destroying the forests they rely on," adds Survival International. "Ill health, misery, and destitution already afflict many hundreds of other Kondh people in the area, thanks to the Vedanta [bauxite] refinery at the base of the Niyamgiri hills."
Many people have already lost their homes due to the construction of the refinery and, continues Survival, "the Orissa government's pollution control board has ruled that chemical emissions from the refinery are 'alarming' and 'continuous'."



