Greenpeace sorry for stunt at ancient Peru site

Environmental group Greenpeace apologized Wednesday after Peru accused it of damaging a millenia-old archaeological site when its activists displayed a protest banner there calling for action on climate change.

Environmental group Greenpeace apologized Wednesday after Peru accused it of damaging a millenia-old archaeological site when its activists displayed a protest banner there calling for action on climate change. AP

LIMA, Peru – Environmental group Greenpeace apologized Wednesday after Peru accused it of damaging a millenia-old archaeological site when its activists displayed a protest banner there calling for action on climate change.

The stunt at the ancient Nazca lines, enormous drawings etched in the earth some 2,000 years ago by a pre-Inca civilization, drew a furious reaction from Peru, which is currently hosting UN talks aimed at curbing global warming.

Greenpeace set up large letters beside one of the designs, known as the Hummingbird, reading: “Time for change! The future is renewable.”

Describing the action as an “attack,” the Peruvian government said the site had been damaged and vowed to prosecute those responsible.

“After the illegal, premeditated action by environmental defense group Greenpeace, the zone has been seriously affected,” the culture ministry said in a statement Tuesday.

It called on Peruvians to “collaborate in identifying the people who carried out this attack on the cultural heritage of all Peruvians and all humanity” and said those responsible must be “stopped from leaving the country.”

Greenpeace said it was “deeply concerned about any offense” it may have caused and said its activism was always waged with respect for “the peoples of the world and their cultural heritage.”

But the Peruvian government “did not accept the apology” because Greenpeace “has not accepted the damage caused,” said Vice Minister for Culture Luis Jaime Castillo after meeting members of Greenpeace’s delegation to the climate talks.

The lines were listed as a Unesco world heritage site in 1994.

Created between 500 BC and AD 500 by the Nazca people, they have long intrigued archaeologists with the mystery of their size, their meticulously drawn figures and their abundance.

Some of the drawings depict living creatures, others stylized plants or fantastical beings, others geometric figures that stretch for kilometers (miles).

The site is best seen from the sky, its lines criss-crossing the Peruvian desert over more than 500 square kilometers (200 square miles).

Greenpeace said on its Facebook page that the letters it used were simply cloth spread across the ground, and that its activists had taken care to cause “absolutely no damage” to the site.

But Peruvian authorities said even entering the area was “strictly prohibited because of the fragility of the terrain around the lines.”

They say a group of 12 to 15 people wearing boots and sneakers entered the zone, where access is only allowed in special foam-covered foot equipment.

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