Peruvian Mining Activist Starts Political Party
01 July 2009 - 4:51AM
Dow Jones News
A high-profile Peruvian environmental activist has founded a
political party advocating greater state control of industry ahead
of Peru's 2011 presidential elections.
Father Marco Arana told foreign journalists Tuesday that his
Tierra y Libertad movement is currently seeking the 145,000
signatures necessary to officially inscribe the party. Arana is a
Catholic priest who helped lead efforts in 2004 against an
expansion of the Yanacocha gold mine, controlled by Newmont Mining
Corp. (NEM).
Arana said President Alan Garcia's pro-business model has
brought inequality, not development, to Peruvians.
He said the party will seek to increase the state's share of oil
revenue, increase social spending and impose greater restrictions
and regulation on key industries such as mining.
The Andean nation is the world's No. 1 silver miner and a major
producer of gold, copper, zinc and other metals.
More than 350 political parties have requested registration
materials from the national elections office since the April 2006
election.
Term limits prohibit Garcia, whose approval rating is at one of
its lowest points since he took office three years ago, from
running for a consecutive five-year term.
-By Leslie Josephs, Dow Jones Newswires; 511-98853-8610;
peru@dowjones.com