Rebel raid strips Colombian tribe of emergency medicines
Rebel raid strips endangered Colombian tribe of emergency medicines
12 September 2011
Armed rebels have hijacked the first attempt to provide medical aid by boat to Colombia’s near-extinct and nomadic Nukak Indians.
Survival has learned that medical staff were forced to abandon all their supplies, which included stretchers, surgical equipment and computers.
The National Indigenous Organization ONIC, which owns the stolen boat, told Survival how it came under attack. Members of FARC (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia) gave those on board twenty minutes to flee.
The incident is a huge blow for vulnerable Nukak Indians who have little or no access to health care. Last month the United Nations listed the tribe as one of 35 groups in immediate danger of extinction.
Survival’s Director Stephen Corry said, ‘Colombia’s interminable civil war has wreaked death and destruction on the Nukak. For the tribe’s nomadic members, it spells absolute disaster. The hijacking of this boat denies them their only source of healthcare. It seems cruel and unfair that this innocent party is suffering the most.’
Nomadic Nukak continue to move through the forest despite the dangers posed by guerrilla insurgents pursuing coca cultivation in the southern Amazon. But some have been forced into settlements on the outskirts of towns, too afraid to return to the forest.
Act now to help the Nukak
Campaigning for the Nukak’s rights has already made a huge difference. After campaigns led by Survival and local indigenous organisations, the Colombian government created a Nukak reserve in 1993 and enlarged it in 1997.
What the Nukak want now is for the boundaries of their reserve to be respected and for them to be able to live there in peace.
Please write to the Colombian government to urge them to ensure the Nukak can return to their land.
ENDS