Worldwide protests to stop Amazon gas project expansion
SURVIVAL INTERNATIONAL PRESS RELEASE
April 19, 2013
Worldwide protests to stop Amazon gas project
expansion
Protesters will carry placards
symbolizing the lethal effects of the Camisea project on
Peru's uncontacted tribes.
© Survival
Survival International supporters will
protest outside Peruvian embassies and consulates around the
world on April 23rd to call for an end to the deadly
expansion of the Camisea gas project in Peru’s Amazon
rainforest, which puts the lives of uncontacted Indians at
risk.
Protesters will carry placards and gas masks symbolizing the lethal effects of the Camisea project on uncontacted tribes in the area, and will hand a petition to Peruvian embassies and consulates in London, San Francisco, Berlin, Madrid and Paris.
The urgent petition asks Peru’s President to stop outsiders and companies from invading uncontacted tribes’ land, and has been signed by over 120,000 people around the world.
Uncontacted Indians are extremely vulnerable to diseases brought in by outsiders – initial exploration in the Camisea block in the 1980s led to the deaths of half the Nahua tribe.
Camisea lies in the heart of the Nahua-Nanti
Reserve for several uncontacted and isolated tribes, and is
the buffer zone to the Manu National Park, considered by
UNESCO to be ‘the most biodiverse place on earth’. It is
Peru’s largest gas project, and is run by Argentina’s
Pluspetrol, US’s Hunt Oil and Spain’s Repsol.
Half of the Nahua tribe was wiped
out after their land was opened up for oil exploration in
the 1980s.
© Johan Wildhagen
Now Peru’s Ministry of
Energy is set to approve a massive expansion of the project,
despite a UN call for the ‘immediate suspension’
of the work, that is likely to prove devastating for the
tribes.
Apart from the risks of diseases from first contact, the gas work also threatens to destroy the forest and scare away the game on which the uncontacted Indians depend for survival.
Survival’s Director Stephen Corry said today, ‘Expanding the Camisea project deep into the territory of uncontacted Indians is a reckless and incredibly irresponsible thing to do. The UN has called for the plan to be scrapped – I hope Peru’s government has the sense to listen.’
ends