‘Uncontacted’ tribes spotted in Brazil

Written by: Bruce Cat on: May 30 2008 Published in: Social News

This photo was released by Brazil’s indigenous peoples’ agency Funai depicts warriors from a tribe in the far western Amazon jungle near the Peruvian border shooting arrows at an airplane carrying agency officials.

uncontacted-tribes in Brazil

The so called “uncontacted” tribe hasn’t seen humans outside of their own group before, so seeing something like a plane hovering above them will be no different than an alien invasion.

The people were sighted in an Ethno-Environmental Protected Area along the Envira River in flights over remote Acre state.

Funai said it photographed “strong and healthy” warriors, six huts and a large planted area. But it was not known to which tribe they belonged, officials said.

“Four distinct isolated peoples exist in this region, whom we have accompanied for 20 years,” Funai’s Jose Carlos Meirelles Junior said in a statement.

Funai does not make contact with the isolated communities of the Amazon area, and it is supposed to prevent invasions of their land, to ensure total autonomy for the remote groups of indigenous people.

The London-based organization Survival International said indigenous tribes in the area are in danger from illegal logging in Peru, which is driving tribes over the border and could lead to conflict with the estimated 500 uncontacted Indians now living on the Brazilian side.

There are more than 100 “uncontacted” tribes worldwide, most of them in Brazil and Peru, the group said in a statement.

“These pictures are further evidence that uncontacted tribes really do exist,” Survival International director Stephen Corry said.

“The world needs to wake up to this, and ensure that their territory is protected in accordance with international law. Otherwise, they will soon be made extinct.”

[via cbc news]

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