Daily Report
E-Journal
Back Issues
Our Mission
Contact Us
Subscribe
Support Us
Links
Documents
About Us
Exit Poll
Search Archive
|
 TheatersBooks
|
Uncontacted tribes flee Peruvian Amazon: evidence
Submitted by WW4 Report on Mon, 09/29/2008 - 20:32.
The Indians are thought to be fleeing from Peru to escape illegal logging devastating their territories. Earlier this year, photos were taken of shelters built by uncontacted Indians from Peru five kilometres across the border into Brazil. Logging in that region has already led to disastrous contact with members of one tribe, the Murunahua, resulting in the death of more than half of them. The arrows were found in the same region (along the Envira River in Acre state) as an uncontacted Brazilian tribe which was photographed earlier this year—photos which made headlines around the world. In the immediate aftermath, Peru's government promised to investigate the logging, but to date has failed to take any effective action. Peru's President, Alan Garcia, has publicly suggested the uncontacted tribes don't exist, saying they have been "invented" by "environmentalists" opposed to oil exploration in the Amazon. Survival International's director, Stephen Corry, said, "This is yet more proof of uncontacted Indians fleeing from Peru into Brazil. Peru's government must not ignore the plight of what are in effect 'uncontacted refugees'—some of Peru's most vulnerable citizens." From Survival International, Sept. 29 See our last posts on Peru and the struggle for the Amazon. |
google2
|
1 hour 47 min ago
2 hours 1 min ago
3 hours 49 min ago
3 hours 55 min ago
6 hours 31 min ago
6 hours 42 min ago
6 hours 44 min ago
6 hours 50 min ago
6 hours 55 min ago
7 hours 10 min ago