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Creation of New Reserves for Uncontacted Tribes

Peru’s indigenous affairs department (INDEPA) held a meeting to discuss the creation of five new reserves for uncontacted tribes in the remote rainforest. 

The meeting was held on 31 March, in Iquitos, a city in northern Peru.
 
One of the proposed reserves is where the Anglo-French oil company Perenco is currently working.
 
Perenco is believed to be sitting on the biggest oil discovery in Peru in thirty years and claims no uncontacted tribes live there.

Another of the proposed reserves is where the Canadian oil company Petrolifera has been exploring for oil by conducting seismic tests, despite the danger this poses to the uncontacted Indians living there,
 
Petrolifera’s CEO, Richard Gusella, has described his company as a ‘poster child’ for companies interacting with local communities.

Only recently a ‘state of emergency’ was declared in more than one hundred indigenous communities in northern Peru after the Brazilian state oil company, Petrobras, announced its intention to enter their land.
 
Some of this land includes part of one of the proposed reserves to be discussed by INDEPA.

To mark the meeting Survival has written an open letter to INDEPA’s director urging him to recognise uncontacted tribes’ land rights and to protect their territories from oil and gas exploration, logging and any other form of natural resource extraction.
 
 
Further information
Survival’s open letter to INDEPA
 

Related articles 
Oil Rush Accelerates in Peru
 
Oil Company Faces Billion Dollar Headache



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