Sunday

Amazon Indians 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 Indians 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’s Director Stephen Corry said, ‘The Canadian state was founded on the theft of tribal land. When Europeans invaded Canada, they introduced alien diseases, seized control of natural resources, and brought about the extinction of entire peoples. It’s a great irony that a Canadian company today is poised to commit the same crimes against tribes in Peru. Why doesn’t the Peruvian government uphold its own commitments to tribal rights? History tells us that when uncontacted peoples’ land is invaded, death, disease and destruction follow.’
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Responses to "Amazon Indians unite against Canadian oil giant (Video)"

  1. Yet another travesty of justice and example of man's inhumanity toward man... when we will learn that continuing to "take" will prove devastating to all of humanity?

  2. Anonymous says:

    Is this another injustice and what global economy means? I didn't know about Canadian oil what they were doing. Crimes against tribal people their lands; the rest of humanity: and all life will continue until the attitude "Profit at All Cost" is turned around. What will future generations have? They can't breath, eat, or drink money!!!! Come to Utah. You can't breath most of the time.

  3. Canadian/world greed needs a kick to the throat, let's give it to them and not buy their "crap", make/grow our own food, be self sufficient, "you can do eat". We used to do it before now it's time to do it again. "Greed is destroying our people and our planet"

  4. Anonymous says:

    please start petition so I can sign it

  5. Anonymous says:

    And the holocaust that began 500 years ago continues uninterrupted. The travesty is that these people just don't have any value in our society. What a tragedy!!!

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