Indigenous Amazonians Unite against Canadian Oil Giant
by Survival International / March 16th, 2013
Indigenous Amazonians from Peru and Brazil have joined together 
to stop a Canadian oil company destroying their land and threatening the lives 
of uncontacted tribes.
Hundreds of Matsés gathered on the border of Peru and Brazil last Saturday and 
called on 
their governments to stop the exploration, warning that the work will 
devastate their forest home.
The oil giant Pacific Rubiales is headquartered in Canada and has 
already started oil exploration in ‘Block 135’ in Peru, which lies 
directly over an area proposed as an uncontacted tribes reserve.
In a rare interview with Survival, a Matsés woman said, ‘Oil will 
destroy the place where our rivers are born. What will happen to the 
fish? What will the animals drink?’
The Matsés number around 2,200 and live along the Peru-Brazil border. Together 
with the closely-related Matis tribe, they were known as the 
‘Jaguar people’ for their facial decorations and tattoos, which 
resembled the jaguar’s whiskers and teeth.
The Matsés were first contacted in the 1960s, and have since suffered from 
diseases introduced by outsiders. Uncontacted tribes are also at extreme risk 
from contact with outsiders through the 
introduction of diseases to which they have little or no immunity.
Despite promising to protect the rights of its indigenous citizens, 
the Peruvian government has allowed the $36 million project to go ahead. 
Contractors will cut hundreds of miles of seismic testing lines through the 
forest home of the uncontacted tribes, and drill exploratory wells.
The government has also granted a license for oil explorations to go 
ahead in ‘Block 137’, just north of ‘Block 135’, which lies directly on 
Matsés land. Despite massive pressure from the company, the tribe is firmly 
resisting the oil company’s activities in their forest.
The effects of oil work are also likely to be felt across the border in 
Brazil’s Javari Valley, home to several other uncontacted tribes, as seismic 
testing and the construction of wells threaten to pollute 
the headwaters of several rivers on which the tribes depend.
Survival International, founded in 1969 after an article by Norman Lewis in the 
UK's Sunday Times highlighted the massacres, land thefts and genocide taking 
place in 
Brazilian Amazonia, is the only international organization supporting 
tribal peoples worldwide. Contact Survival International at: 
i...@survival-international.org. Read other articles by Survival International, 
or visit Survival International's website.
This article was posted on Saturday, March 16th, 2013 at 7:59am and is filed 
under Canada, Corporate Globalization, Mining, Oil, Gas, Coal, Pipelines, 
Original Peoples, Peru, Resistance, Solidarity. 

http://dissidentvoice.org/2013/03/indigenous-amazonians-unite-against-canadian-oil-giant/#more-48064


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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