Women in Peru: The Fight for Indigenous Rights
Peru’s flourishing mining industry has spurred economic development, but this has exacted a heavy toll on Indigenous communities, especially women. Indigenous women in Peru face heightened challenges due to extraction projects, including land loss, environmental degradation and gender-based violence. Nevertheless, their resilience and advocacy leadership have facilitated significant advancements for women’s rights in the country. Through legal actions and grassroots initiatives, Indigenous women are proactively safeguarding their lands and shaping policies. This article highlights their adversities and triumphs in conflicts such as the Conga Mine, Tía María, and oil spills in Loreto, while emphasizing the ongoing quest for justice.
Conga Mine: Máxima Acuña’s Stand for Land and Water
The Conga Mine, a gold and copper project in Cajamarca, posed a significant threat to four lakes that are essential for local water supplies. Máxima Acuña, a Quechua subsistence farmer, emerged as a symbol of resistance after she refused to cede her land to Newmont Mining. Despite facing violent eviction attempts, criminalization, and harassment, Acuña achieved a landmark court ruling in 2014 that halted the mine’s expansion. Her courage earned her the Goldman Environmental Prize and inspired a documentary.
Although the project remains on hold, her success underscores the potential for Indigenous women’s rights in Peru to prevail against corporate power. Grassroots organizations like GRUFIDES continue to back similar legal efforts, illustrating that local activism can have a global impact.
Loreto’s Oil Spills: Women Rise from Crisis to Leadership
In the Amazon, persistent oil spills from the state-owned Petroperú have contaminated rivers and severely impacted the Kukama Indigenous communities. Leaders like Flor de María Paraná have emerged as powerful advocates, establishing organizations to demand clean water, health care and remediation for the spills, ultimately securing a 2021 court order that mandated government action.
Their advocacy has transformed community leadership, with groups such as ONAMIAP pushing for policies that prioritize Indigenous women in environmental and health issues. These accomplishments illustrate how crises can catalyze progress in women’s rights in Peru.
A Path Forward for Women in Peru
In Peru, Indigenous women are transforming challenges into powerful advocacy, proving that grassroots initiatives can effectively address deep-rooted injustices. Despite persistent threats such as inadequate enforcement of prior consultations, gender-based violence, and demands for corporate accountability, their achievements serve as a model for meaningful change. As Peru strives to balance economic development with human rights, the leadership of Indigenous women is essential. Their struggle extends beyond issues of land and water; it envisions a future in which women’s rights in Peru are unequivocally upheld.
– Emilia Bartle
Emilia is based in Watford, UK and focuses on Good News and Politics for The Borgen Project.
Photo: Flickr
