Published: 17:39, September 16, 2024
At least 20 dead in violence near PNG gold mine, media reports
By Reuters
In this Feb 14, 2006 file photo, a close-up of the chest patch of a worker at Barrick's Ruby Hill Mine, outside Eureka, Nevada, is shown. (PHOTO / AP)

SYDNEY - Violent attacks near Barrick Gold's Porgera gold mine in Papua New Guinea has likely killed at least 20 people and forced women and children to flee the region, local media reported.

Papua New Guinea has granted police emergency powers, including the use of lethal force, to contain the violence in Porgera between illegal settlers squatting near the gold mine and local landowners, newspapers Post-Courier and The National reported late on Sunday.

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Barrick Gold and PNG Police did not immediately respond to a request seeking comment.

Several schools, hospitals, banks and other government services in the regions have been closed due to the violence, the Post-Courier said in a report.

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Home to hundreds of tribes and languages, the Pacific nation to Australia's north has a long history of tribal warfare. However, violence has ratcheted up over the past decade as villagers swapped bows and arrows for military rifles and elections deepened existing tribal divides.

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Violent attacks on three remote villages in July in the country's north killed 26 people, including 16 children, according to the United Nations.