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Press Releases | 5 July, 2007 [ 11:00 ]

Peru: Tribes in Peru's Amazon Endangered due to Oil Boom





Oil industry told to keep off uncontacted tribes’ land



Oil companies from all over the world have been warned by Peru’s national indigenous peoples’ organization not to explore for oil in areas where uncontacted tribes live. The tribes face extinction from an oil boom in Peru that has seen 70% of the Peruvian Amazon opened up to exploration.

The Interethnic Association for the Development of the Peruvian Jungle (AIDESEP) has written to 14 companies saying, ‘We want you to understand the extreme vulnerability of these isolated peoples and the risks they will face if hydrocarbon activity takes place on their land.’

Exxon Mobil and Repsol YPF are amongst the companies which AIDESEP has written to. 19 oil lots are due to be sold by auction on July 12 and seven of them are superimposed over areas inhabited by uncontacted tribes. The auction is organised by Perupetro, whose president, Daniel Saba, recently caused outrage by questioning the tribes’ existence and then announcing his intention to contact them.

The danger posed by oil companies to the tribes is enormous because of their lack of immunity to outsiders’ diseases. Following exploration on their land in the 1980s, more than 50% of the previously uncontacted Nahua tribe died.

Survival International’s Director, Stephen Corry, said today, ‘Contacting these peoples is tantamount to destroying them. That has been proved over and over again. It's surely time to heed the lesson of history and ensure it doesn't happen again. Enforced contact with such peoples is as unacceptable as slavery. No responsible corporation should even be considering going into their lands.’

For further information contact Miriam Ross:

(+44) (0)20 7687 8734


mr@survival-international.org

Official Press Release Link

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2 Comments

# Azusa Murakami says :
17 October, 2007 [ 02:13 ]

Hello Ross.
How are you?I am Azusa,high school student in Japan and I am doing research on uncontacted tribes living along the Amazon.
I have not got any useful imformations yet and I would like to know much about them.

A certain TV show once aired that some oil companies are destroying the land which belongs to uncontacted tribs.Since I watched that show,I was strucked deeply.Yes it was so unforgetable that I want to know more about it.

Would you mind giving me some information and email me back?
I hope you understand what I write....
I am sorry for you if I typed with wrong English.

Thank you for reading and have a great day.


Cheers
Azusa    

# Scott Wallace says :
18 October, 2007 [ 07:57 ]

Azusa,

It might be useful to read National Geographic, August 2003 about a journey into the land of one such uncontacted tribe on Brazil's side of the border. I am the author of that story. There is a flash presentation on nationalgeographic.com website, using key words Into the Amazon or you can read the article on my website, www.scottwallace.com. I am the author.

Best wishes and good luck in your research.

Scott Wallace

PS -- The National Geographic article contains one omission. It should have said "There are 17 confirmed uncontacted tribes and there may be as many as 40." Because of editing error, "there may be as many as 40" disappeared from the text. Now, Brazil has since revised the number to more than 60.

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