Oil Companies Banned From Tribes' Reserve
Oil companies banned from uncontacted tribes' reserve
A reserve for uncontacted tribes in the remote Peruvian Amazon has been made off-limits to oil and gas companies.
The decision was revealed this morning at a promotional event held in London by Perupetro, the state company responsible for promoting oil and gas exploration in Peru. The vast majority of the reserve had been previously open to exploration by Brazilian company Petrobras, in an area known as ‘Lot 110’.
The reserve is inhabited by some of the world's last uncontacted indigenous people, a tribe known as the Murunahua (or Chitonahua). When some Murunahua were contacted for the first time in the mid-1990s, an estimated 50% of them died.
However, Perupetro also announced it intends to
open 25 new ‘lots’ for oil and gas exploration,
totalling 10 million hectares and almost all in the Amazon.
This move has been immediately criticised by Peru’s
national Amazon indigenous organisation, AIDESEP, who called
it a ‘new provocation’ and a ‘new threat’ to
Peru’s indigenous population.
Perupetro’s promotional tour began
in Houston earlier this week. The company chairman, Daniel
Saba, has made numerous inflammatory comments in
the recent past, including denying uncontacted tribes
exist or that any reserves have been created for them.
Survival International's director, Stephen Corry, said today, ‘It’s good news that the Murunahua Reserve has been made off-limits to oil and gas companies because it would have been extremely dangerous to the tribes, and the companies would have had no consent to operate there. But Perupetro must now extend that precedent to other areas in Peru: it must not allow companies to work anywhere where they don’t have the consent of local people – uncontacted or not.’
ENDS
Office of The Kiingitanga: Te Arikinui And HM King Charles III Meet At Buckingham Palace
Global Sumud Flotilla: The Siege Will Break - Final Leg To Gaza Following Israeli State Piracy, Abductions And Torture In International Waters
Kiingitanga: Māori Queen Meets HRH Prince William At Windsor Castle
Colin Greer & Reynard Loki, IMI: Criminalizing Childhood - When The Justice System Fails America’s Youth
Global Sumud Flotilla: Saif Abukeshek & Thiago Ávila Released - Victory For International Mobilization; A Reminder Of Who Remains Behind
Aotearoa Delegation of the Global Sumud Flotilla: The Global Sumud Flotilla Remains Undeterred As Over 30 Boats Depart For Türkiye