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Venezuelan MP says terrorist group controls mining operations in the country

Américo De Grazia said that some First Nations are forced into mining because when they try to leave their remote settlements, government officials ask them for gold in exchange for fuel

According to De Grazia, however, the Arc has been expanding beyond the legally permitted areas and destructive operations are now taking place in protected spaces such as the Canaima National Park, which was named a World Heritage Site by Unesco in 1962.

National parks and reserves in the region have been traditionally inhabited by different Indigenous groups whose members add up to 50,000 people. Many of them have protested against mining operations in their traditional territories.

Others – De Grazia said – have been forced into mining because when they try to leave their remote settlements, government officials ask them for gold in exchange for fuel. In fact, some researchers have said that there is a parallel Indigenous mining arc developing in southeastern Venezuela.

“They [government officials] start telling them that by going into artisanal mining they can progress and they even give them supplies. Then, they are assaulted, massacres occur and ‘the saviours of the Indigenous people’ come in. These ‘saviours’ are gang leaders from the ELN, which is a terrorist group that was born in Colombia but that is controlled from Cuba,” De Grazia said. 

The MP, who hails from the Bolívar state, reminded his followers that before the Hugo Chávez and Maduro regimes took over, First Nations’ economy was based on tourism, hunting and fishing. 

“Canaima is no longer known for the Angel Falls, for its tourism or accommodations. Now it is known for its mining activities and ongoing massacres,” the MP said. 

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