Lima: Thousands of illegal gold miners battled police for control of a regional capital in the Amazon basin on Wednesday and at least three people were killed by gunfire.
Outnumbered riot police fired tear gas against miners who wielded clubs and rocks and tried to seize strategic facilities in Puerto Maldonado.
The miners are fighting government efforts to regulate small-scale gold extraction, which is ravaging the rainforest, contaminating it with tons of mercury.
Interior Ministry spokesman Victor Calderon said it was unclear whether police fired directly on rioters in Puerto Maldonado, a boomtown at the confluence of two jungle rivers in a region popular with ecotourists.
After talks failed with a government delegation, at least 12,500 miners had attempted to seize public buildings, markets and the airport in the city, said Madre de Dios regional President Jose Luis Aguirre.
"The situation is untenable. You can hear gunshots throughout the entire city," he said by phone, calling the situation "out of control".
Three people were killed by gunfire, said regional health director Dr Jorge Asencios, and 38 were treated at Santa Rosa regional hospital for injuries, including a police officer hit in the head by a rock.
Asencios said ten of the wounded would be airlifted to Lima, the capital, for treatment.
Interior Minister Daniel Lozada said in a TV interview that some miners "were armed, even with explosives ... and obviously police had to act to maintain order".
He said police made 62 arrests and that nine officers were among the injured. By afternoon, 500 police reinforcements had arrived to bolster a badly outnumbered contingent of 700 officers.
Police said they prevented rioters from seizing the bus station and airport of the largely dirt-street capital of about 37,000 residents. But to the west, miners took control of a key bridge, blocking the transoceanic highway that links the highland city of Cuzco and Peru's coast to Brazil.
"Everyone is frightened. The few government offices that are functioning are working with doors shut," said Oscar Guadalupe, an activist who works with victims of child prostitution in the largely lawless region.
Protesters piled rocks and garbage on street corners and residents stayed home behind locked doors. The streets were empty.
A gold rush has swelled Madre de Dios state with about 40,000 small-scale miners who are scarring virgin rain forest as they extract gold particles from river beds and alluvial plains. Mercury is used to bind the gold together in nuggets.
The gold fever has been fuelled by a tripling in the price of the precious metal over the past decade.
Unscrupulous investors
It has attracted poor farmers from the Andean highlands as well as unscrupulous investors and gunslingers, and Madre de Dios now produces about a fifth of Peru's overall annual gold yield.
The mining is almost entirely illegal and government attempts to regulate it have been mostly futile, not just in Madre de Dios but in other regions where informal mining is also rampant.
Informal miners also held protests Wednesday in at least two other regions, Piura in Peru's north-west and Puno in the southern highlands bordering Bolivia.
A government commission led by the environment minister was in Puerto Maldonado on Monday to discuss legalising the mining activity. But most informal mining leaders walked out after their request to increase their delegation's size was turned down, said Humberto Cordero, a local environment ministry official.
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