BBC News, 3
July 2013
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| A picture released by the culture ministry showed the area cleared by heavy machinery |
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Authorities in Peru say an ancient pyramid at the oldest archaeological site near the capital, Lima, has been destroyed.
They are
pressing criminal charges against two real-estate companies blamed for tearing
down the structure, which was 6m (20-ft) high.
An
archaeologist said those responsible had committed "irreparable
damage".
The
building was one of 12 pyramids found at the El Paraiso complex and is thought
to be at least 4,000 years old.
The site,
which dates back to the Late Preceramic (3500-1800 BC) period, is situated
several kilometres north of Lima.
According
to Peru's tourism ministry, it was a religious and administrative centre long
before the pre-Columbian Inca civilisation.
Rafael
Varon, deputy minister of cultural patrimony, said the destruction had taken
place over the weekend. He said company workers using heavy machinery had
attempted to destroy three further pyramids, but had been stopped by onlookers.
Mr Varon
said criminal complaints had been lodged against two companies.
Marco
Guilen, director of an excavation project at El Paraiso, told Associated Press
news agency the people who tore down the pyramid "have committed
irreparable damage to a page of Peruvian history".
"We
are not going to be able to know in what ways it was constructed, what
materials were used in it and how the society in that part of the pyramid
behaved."

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