New Internationalist

Virginia Pinares

Viginia Pinares is a woman with a mission. ‘I’m bringing a message from the forgotten rural women, from the most remote regions where the government has no presence. We must enter power and they have to see that we are coming!’

She does not mince her words, in a country where political and corporate corruption conspire against people like her. ‘There are many things happening in Peru that should not happen! Money rules over justice! But they are going to pay, morally, psychologically,’ she warns.

A Quechua-speaking farmer who represents communities affected by mining in Cotabambas in the Andean department of Apurimac, Virginia was speaking to me during a visit to

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from New Internationalist

New Internationalist3 min read
Pumped Up
Our air-source heat pump often seems like magic. Last winter, temperatures here in Oxford fell to -10 degrees Celsius. But this unremarkable looking device, whirring quietly away on our outside back wall, was somehow extracting enough heat from the f
New Internationalist1 min readCrime & Violence
Reasons To Be Cheerful
Wildcats could be brought back from the brink of extinction in the UK, after a Scottish project introduced 19 young wildcats into a secret pine forest location in the Cairngorm mountains. The destruction of native woodland, interbreeding with domesti
New Internationalist1 min read
Women in Revolt!
(Music For Nations, CD, DL, LP) musicfornations.lnk.to/WomenInRevolt Collected as a soundtrack to Women in Revolt!, the exhibition at London’s Tate Britain (untill 7 April 2024), Women in Revolt! Underground Rebellion in British Music – 1977-1985 is

Related Books & Audiobooks