THE CONFLICT
One month after a bloody clash between indigenous natives (Awajun), local migrants and the Peruvian national police, life outside the provincial city of Bagua, in Peru's north Amazon jungle, has returned to normal.
On June 5, 2009 the police, using tanks, helicopters, tear gas and firearms, attacked a roadblock approximately 450 miles north of the capital, Lima. Protestors had been blocking roads for two months to demonstrate their opposition to laws that gave logging, mining and oil companies access to their ancestral grounds - the Amazon.
According to Amnesty International more than 30 indigenous citizens and 22 police were killed. Some reports indicate 50 people have been injured. The numbers are disputable depending upon who is questioned. Peru's Congress has since repealed two key pieces of legislation that contributed to the protest.
The indigenous community commonly refer to the attack and the events that led up to it as El Conflicto (The Conflict). They are upset that shooting victims must use local plants with healing properties to treat gunshot wounds, because they lack medical facilities.