Salgado’s ‘Genesis’ Showcases Photos Of Threatened Tribes
SURVIVAL INTERNATIONAL PRESS RELEASE
April 3, 2013
Salgado’s ‘Genesis’ Showcases Photos Of Threatened Tribes
As London’s Natural History
Museum prepares for the opening of renowned photographer
Sebastião Salgado’s new exhibition ‘Genesis’ on April
11, Survival International has highlighted
the plight of some of the tribal peoples portrayed in the
show.
The exhibition will showcase, amongst others,
photographs of Ethiopia’s Omo Valley tribes; Bushmen of the Central Kalahari Game
Reserve in Botswana; the isolated Zo’é in Brazil; the Nenets of Siberia; and tribes of West Papua: all of these face
persecution by governments, the theft of their lands and
resources, or the threat of devastating
epidemics.
Ethiopia’s Omo Valley tribes are being forcibly evicted and resettled as the government is leasing large tracts of their land to national and foreign companies. The massive Gibe III dam, when completed, will severely disrupt the flow of the Omo river on which 200,000 tribal people depend for their survival.
Botswana’s Bushmen are preparing for yet another court
case in their struggle for their right to live on their land
in peace – a right which was confirmed by the country’s High Court
in 2006. However, the Botswana government is making their
lives impossible by cracking down on hunting, the
Bushmen’s main means of subsistence, and forcing them to
apply for permits to enter their land, in defiance of the
High Court’s ruling.
Salgado’s exhibition will also
show images of the Zo’é, a small isolated tribe living in
Brazil’s Amazon rainforest. While their territory is
relatively free from invasion, they are still extremely vulnerable to diseases brought
in by outsiders who periodically encroach on their land.
The reindeer-herding Nenets live in Siberia’s arctic
north, a remote, wind-blasted place of permafrost,
serpentine rivers and dwarf shrubs. Today, their ways of
life are severely affected by oil and gas extraction and climate
change. Their migration routes are affected by the
infrastructure associated with resource exploitation and
they report that pollution threatens the quality of the
pastures.
Finally, Salgado’s exhibition will document
the tribes of West Papua, who have faced
brutal oppression at the hands of the Indonesian government.
It has been estimated that at least 100,000 Papuans have
been killed by the Indonesian authorities since the
1960s.
Survival’s Director Stephen Corry said,
’Salgado’s photographs of contemporary tribal peoples
celebrate the enormous diversity of humankind. Sadly, most
of the tribes featured here are suffering from persecution
– to the point that their very existence is threatened. We
hope that people will be inspired by this exhibition to take
the next step and get involved in the campaign for their
rights.’
Read this on http://www.survivalinternational.org/news/9088
Survival International helps tribal peoples defend their lives, protect their lands and determine their own futures. Founded 1969.
ENDS