
“The mobilization has ended. The residents gathered in Lima, where several agreements were reached,” Oscar Luque, a representative for the Ombudsman’s Office of Peru, told AFP.
A week ago, protesters blocked train tracks to demand their interests be represented in the search for a new bus operator ferrying visitors on the last leg of a trip from the city of Cusco to Machu Picchu in the Peruvian Andes.
More than 1,500 visitors were evacuated amid clashes between protesters and police.
Now, two locally-owned companies will transport visitors to the site “for four months” before open bidding on the bus contract begins, Luque said.
A UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1983, the ancient, fortified complex is considered a marvel of architecture and engineering, and receives around 4,500 visitors a day, according to the tourism ministry.