Isolated AMazon Indians Die of Swine Flu
Seven Yanomami Indians in Venezuela have died from an outbreak of suspected swine flu in the last two weeks. Another 1,000 Yanomami are reported to have caught the virulent strain of flu.
The Venezuelan government has sealed off the area,
and sent in medical teams to treat the Yanomami. The
regional office of the World Health Organization has
confirmed the presence of swine flu.
There are fears
that the epidemic could sweep through the Yanomami territory
and kill many more Indians.
The Yanomami are the
largest relatively isolated tribe in the Amazon rainforest,
with a population of about 32,000 that straddle the
Venezuela-Brazil border. Due to this isolation they have
very little resistance to introduced diseases such as flu.
In the 1980-90s, when goldminers invaded their
land, one fifth of the Yanomami in Brazil died from
diseases such as flu and malaria introduced by the miners.
Their future was only secured after a major international
campaign led by the Yanomami themselves, Survival International and the Pro
Yanomami Commission.
Health care is already extremely
precarious on both sides of the border. Many Yanomami
communities have no access at all to health care and this
mountainous, forested region presents many challenges in the
provision of emergency medical aid.
The Yanomami
territory lies on the border of northern Brazil and southern
Venezuela and is the largest indigenous territory in
tropical rainforest in the world.
Last month Survival
published a report highlighting the
special threat that swine flu presents to indigenous people
around the world.
Stephen Corry, director of Survival
said, ‘The situation is critical. Both governments must
take immediate action to halt the epidemic and radically
improve the health care to the Yanomami. If they do not, we
could once more see hundreds of Yanomami dying of treatable
diseases. This would be utterly devastating for this
isolated tribe, whose population has only just recovered
from the epidemics which decimated their population 20 years
ago.’
ENDS