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Pataz Mine Attack Shows How Peru's Gold Rush Turns Violent
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points
Shots echoed near a mine shaft known locally as Papagayo, in the Morena area of Pataz province, in Peru's La Libertad region.
The shooting happened in the early hours of December 31, 2025, in a rugged Andean corridor roughly 880 kilometers from Lima that has become one of Peru 's most strategic gold-producing zones.
In the first hours after the attack, information moved faster than verification. Pataz mayor Aldo Mariños told local radio that police had received three bodies and that seven people were believed missing, based on preliminary data updated to midnight.
Some local outlets floated a higher possible death toll, with figures rising as high as 13. Reports also pointed to an informal operation inside a concession associated with a company referred to as Minera Grande.
Then the official paper trail began to narrow the story. Peru's Public Prosecutor's Office said a provincial prosecutor opened a preliminary homicide investigation, ordered the removal of the bodies, and sent them to Trujillo's forensic unit for autopsies.
Investigators also collected ballistic evidence, including 11 shell casings reported at the scene. Compañía Minera Poderosa, a major operator in the area, said its security team moved toward the Papagayo shaft after hearing gunfire and found three people dead from gunshot wounds.
Pataz gold crimes underline supply-chain and security risks
The company said the individuals had entered the area illegally to take ore. It also said two suspects were detained and handed over to Peru's National Police, and that police verification found no hostages or missing people inside the company's controlled area.
The story behind the story is why Pataz keeps producing tragedies that look, at first glance, like isolated crimes. Gold is portable, high-value, and easy to launder.
In a landscape dotted with informal pits and overlapping claims, armed groups can tax access, steal ore, and intimidate communities.
Peru has kept Pataz under repeated states of emergency since 2024, yet enforcement remains uneven. A permit-based“formalization” system meant to separate small miners from criminal networks has often created gray zones instead.
For readers abroad, this is not only about Peru's security crisis. It is about supply-chain risk, corporate security costs, and the hard truth that commodity booms can finance violence when the state cannot consistently control territory.
Three people were confirmed dead after gunfire at a mine shaft in Peru's Pataz gold belt, while early claims of more deaths and missing people remain unverified.
Prosecutors opened a homicide investigation and sent the bodies to Trujillo for autopsies, underscoring how slowly facts harden in remote zones.
The deeper story is about power: who controls tunnels, ore, and protection money in a region that feeds global gold supply chains.
Shots echoed near a mine shaft known locally as Papagayo, in the Morena area of Pataz province, in Peru's La Libertad region.
The shooting happened in the early hours of December 31, 2025, in a rugged Andean corridor roughly 880 kilometers from Lima that has become one of Peru 's most strategic gold-producing zones.
In the first hours after the attack, information moved faster than verification. Pataz mayor Aldo Mariños told local radio that police had received three bodies and that seven people were believed missing, based on preliminary data updated to midnight.
Some local outlets floated a higher possible death toll, with figures rising as high as 13. Reports also pointed to an informal operation inside a concession associated with a company referred to as Minera Grande.
Then the official paper trail began to narrow the story. Peru's Public Prosecutor's Office said a provincial prosecutor opened a preliminary homicide investigation, ordered the removal of the bodies, and sent them to Trujillo's forensic unit for autopsies.
Investigators also collected ballistic evidence, including 11 shell casings reported at the scene. Compañía Minera Poderosa, a major operator in the area, said its security team moved toward the Papagayo shaft after hearing gunfire and found three people dead from gunshot wounds.
Pataz gold crimes underline supply-chain and security risks
The company said the individuals had entered the area illegally to take ore. It also said two suspects were detained and handed over to Peru's National Police, and that police verification found no hostages or missing people inside the company's controlled area.
The story behind the story is why Pataz keeps producing tragedies that look, at first glance, like isolated crimes. Gold is portable, high-value, and easy to launder.
In a landscape dotted with informal pits and overlapping claims, armed groups can tax access, steal ore, and intimidate communities.
Peru has kept Pataz under repeated states of emergency since 2024, yet enforcement remains uneven. A permit-based“formalization” system meant to separate small miners from criminal networks has often created gray zones instead.
For readers abroad, this is not only about Peru's security crisis. It is about supply-chain risk, corporate security costs, and the hard truth that commodity booms can finance violence when the state cannot consistently control territory.
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