Advocates are concerned by a recent uptick in sightings of uncontacted people.
Indigenous people with
no prior contact to the outside world have just emerged from the Amazon
rainforest in Brazil and made contact with a group of settled Indians,
after being spotted migrating to evade illegal loggers, advocates say.
The news, which was released yesterday (July 2), comes after sightings of the uncontacted Indians
in Brazil near the border with Peru, according to the group Survival
International. Officials with the organization had warned last month
that the isolated tribes face threats of disease and violence as they
moved into new territory and possibly encountered other people.
"Something serious must have happened," José Carlos Meirelles, a former
official with the Brazilian Indian Affairs Department FUNAI, said in a statement.
"It is not normal for such a large group of uncontacted Indians to
approach in this way. This is a completely new and worrying situation,
and we currently do not know what has caused it."
Survival International officials said dozens of uncontacted Indians
were recently spotted close to the home of the Ashaninka Indians in
Brazil's Acre state along the Envira River, while a government
investigation in the region uncovered more ephemeral traces of the tribe
on the move: footprints, temporary camps and food leftovers. On Sunday
(June 29), reports suggest, the vulnerable group of Indians made contact
with the Asháninka.
Advocates think the Indians crossed into Brazil from Peru to escape drug
traffickers and illegal loggers who started working in their territory,
Fiona Watson, research and field director for Survival International,
told Live Science in an email.
Advocates warned this could be a deadly development.
As they travel, the tribe may be at risk of clashes with other groups and contagious diseases
to which they have no immunity. Illnesses like the flu and malaria, for
example, devastated the Zo'e tribe in northern Brazil after Christian
missionaries established a base camp in the area in the 1980s.
"I am from the same area as they are," Nixiwaka Yawanawá, an Indian
from Brazil's Acre state, said in a statement. "It is very worrying that
my relatives are at risk of disappearing. It shows the injustice that
we face today. They are even more vulnerable because they can’t
communicate with the authorities. Both governments must act now to
protect and to stop a disaster against my people," added Yawanawá, who
joined Survival to speak out for the rights of such indigenous peoples.
Another uncontacted tribe
was famously photographed near the Brazil-Peru border in 2008. Images
released by Survival International at the time showed men pointing
arrows at the plane photographing them. In 2011, a government post that
was monitoring the area was overrun by illegal loggers and drug
smugglers.
"International
borders don't exist for uncontacted tribes, which is why Peru and Brazil
must work together to prevent lives being lost," Survival director
Stephen Corry urged in the statement. "Both governments must act now if
their uncontacted citizens are to survive.
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