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On March 15, the United Nations General Assembly voted 170–4 to create a new Human Rights Council, effectively dissolving the oft-criticized Commission on Human Rights. Candidates for the Council will need to be elected by an absolute majority of 96 votes in order to secure a position, and once elected members can serve a maximum of two consecutive terms.

The Human Rights Watch is urging Peruvian politicians to take their role seriously in promoting the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. The commission is pressured by influential politicians and various other elites to tame its findings to reflect positively on the military and its leadership. Human Rights Watch stresses the importance of the commission for justice and progress of Peru, which was roiled by decades-long civil war between a Maoist insurgency (the Shining Path) with a penchant for massacring indigenous communities, and an oppressive military with identical tendencies.
In a statement released Tuesday, the Peruvian truth and reconciliation committee reported the death toll of their civil war to be as high as 60,000 people. The civil war, fought in the 1980s and 1990s between the military and the Maoist “Shining Path”, hit indigenous peoples hardest, as they were explicitly targeted by both warring parties. The government’s previous estimates were around 30,000 deaths; this revised number comes much closer to the claims of indigenous peoples.

At least 70 workers on the Camisea natural gas pipeline in Ayacucho were kidnapped early Monday morning by unidentified assailants and held for a ransom of one million dollars and assorted communications equipment. On Tuesday the army led a raid on the kidnappers, freeing the captives. The whereabouts of the kidnappers are unknown. President Alejandro Toledo said afterward that he believed the kidnappers were remnants of the Maoist Shining Path, whose insurgency led to an extremely violent civil war that killed over 35,000 during the 1980s and early 1990s.

Isolated indigenous people living in the Peruvian Amazon are being exposed to disease and social disruption due to forced contact with workers from the $1.4 billion Camisea Gas Project, Pluspetrol of Argentina, and Hunt Oil of Texas. The 1.1 million acre Nahua-Kugapakori Reserve is the home of the Nahua, Nanti, Matsigenka, and Kirineri peoples, estimated at a population of 1,000 to 2,000 people. These peoples live in isolation from Peruvian society and have minimal contact with other indigenous populations.

On June 28 a meeting was held in Quito, under the title of “International Forum: The Impacts of the Spraying of Crops, Typified as “Illicit Activity”, and the Armed Conflict. Responses of the Indigenous Amazon Peoples of the Boundaries”. Amazonian indigenous peoples from Ecuador, Colombia, Perú and Brazil met to discuss a joint proposal for defending their traditional ways of life and environment in the face of Plan Colombia. The proposal will be addressed to their respective governments and to the United States in the coming months.

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