Apr 25 2013
Indian Country: Worldwide Protests Demand Protection for Peru’s Uncontacted Tribes
In cities around the world today, Survival International supporters held protests outside Peruvian embassies and consulates – seeking an end to the deadly expansion of the Camisea gas project in Peru’s Amazon rainforest, which threatens the lives of uncontacted Indians.
Protesters in London and Madrid wore gas masks and helmets depicting gas workers, while carrying placards symbolizing the lethal effects of the Camisea project. Part of the protest demonstration included handing “oil canisters filled with the names of 120,000 people to the Peruvian embassies and consulates, asking Peru’s President to stop outsiders and companies from invading uncontacted tribes’ land,” according to a Survival International press release.
A similar protest was set for 9 a.m. this morning in San Francisco.
At each protest a letter was presented to the embassies and consulates by Survival that was addressed to Peru’s President Ollanta Humala that said, “Oil drilling and logging in uncontacted tribes’ territories could wipe the Indians out.
Protesters in Berlin wearing masks and helmets to symbolize the lethal effects of the Camisea project on Peru’s uncontacted tribes. (Courtesy Survival International)
Protesters in Berlin wearing masks and helmets to symbolize the lethal effects of the Camisea project on Peru’s uncontacted tribes. (Courtesy Survival International)
“Please protect these peoples’ right to live in peace and security – stop the loggers and oil companies from entering their land.”
As Indian Country Today Media Network reported on March 4, Peru recognizes 15 isolated groups, possibly totaling as many as 10,000 people, in various parts of Peru’s Amazon region, according to Jesús Castro Suárez, director of Ecodess, a non-profit organization working with The Inter-Ethnic Association for Development of the Peruvian Amazon (Asociación Interétnica de Desarrollo de la Selva Peruana, Aidesep). There are five “territorial reserves,” covering some 10,860 miles, that protect areas inhabited by some of the groups, but others are unprotected. (Related story: New Campaign Hopes to Raise Awareness of Threats to Peru’s Nomadic Indigenous People)
According to the Forest Peoples Programme (FPP), a non-government human rights group, that supports the struggles of indigenous forest peoples in defending their land and livelihoods, the Camisea project which is Peru’s largest and most controversial hydrocarbons development has government support in expanding. “A consortium headed by Argentine company Pluspetrol is planning to drill over 20 new wells and conduct intensive seismic tests in a concession called ‘Lot 88’ in the Camisea gas fields in the Amazon in south-east Peru,” according to the FPP website.
Read more at http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2013/04/23/worldwide-protests-demand-protection-perus-uncontacted-tribes-148978
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