

Uncontacted Indians face annihilation


Uncontacted Indians face annihilation
The Issue
The Awá are one of the last nomadic hunter-gatherer tribes in Brazil. About 60 Awá have no contact with outsiders.
Although most live in legally recognized reserves, the Awá are hemmed into ever smaller spaces as loggers, settlers and cattle ranchers invade their land and cut down their forest.http://www.survival-international.org/tribes/awa
The Awá are a small tribe living in the Amazon state of Maranhão. They are one of only two nomadic hunter-gatherer tribes remaining in Brazil.
Some are uncontacted, ranging from tiny family groups living in the last fragments of Maranhão's rapidly dwindling rainforest outside legally recognized territories, to approximately 40 individuals living in the Araribóia reserve.
In the 1970s huge iron ore deposits were discovered in the region. This led to the Great Carajás Programme, a development project funded by the EU and the World Bank which included building a mine and a railway.
The Awá and other indigenous peoples saw their lands opened up to unprecedented invasions by outsiders.
‘ We live in the depths of the forest and are getting cornered as the outsiders close in. We are always fleeing. Without the forest, we are nobody and have no way of surviving.To'o, Awá man '
Today Awá lands are being targetted by loggers, who are bulldozing roads into their forests, and by settlers, who hunt the game they rely on, exposing the Indians to disease and violence.
Several large cattle ranches occupy significant tracts of Awá land and have already destroyed much forest. A federal judge is due to decide whether they should be expelled.
ACTION: Write a letter for the AWA'
http://www.survival-international.org/actnow/writealetter/awa

The Issue
The Awá are one of the last nomadic hunter-gatherer tribes in Brazil. About 60 Awá have no contact with outsiders.
Although most live in legally recognized reserves, the Awá are hemmed into ever smaller spaces as loggers, settlers and cattle ranchers invade their land and cut down their forest.http://www.survival-international.org/tribes/awa
The Awá are a small tribe living in the Amazon state of Maranhão. They are one of only two nomadic hunter-gatherer tribes remaining in Brazil.
Some are uncontacted, ranging from tiny family groups living in the last fragments of Maranhão's rapidly dwindling rainforest outside legally recognized territories, to approximately 40 individuals living in the Araribóia reserve.
In the 1970s huge iron ore deposits were discovered in the region. This led to the Great Carajás Programme, a development project funded by the EU and the World Bank which included building a mine and a railway.
The Awá and other indigenous peoples saw their lands opened up to unprecedented invasions by outsiders.
‘ We live in the depths of the forest and are getting cornered as the outsiders close in. We are always fleeing. Without the forest, we are nobody and have no way of surviving.To'o, Awá man '
Today Awá lands are being targetted by loggers, who are bulldozing roads into their forests, and by settlers, who hunt the game they rely on, exposing the Indians to disease and violence.
Several large cattle ranches occupy significant tracts of Awá land and have already destroyed much forest. A federal judge is due to decide whether they should be expelled.
ACTION: Write a letter for the AWA'
http://www.survival-international.org/actnow/writealetter/awa

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Petition created on April 7, 2009