SURVIVAL INTERNATIONAL PRESS RELEASE
May 4, 2012
Uncontacted Mashco-Piro are believed
to live in the path of the road. One band
were recently spotted further south.
© D. Cortijo/Survival
Peruâs Congress is about to approve a highly controversial road that will slash in half the territory of at least two uncontacted tribes.Â
Congressmen are considering a law that could declare the project a âpublic necessityâ, and consequently bypass huge indigenous opposition.
The proposed road will run across the southeast of Peruâs Amazon from Puerto Esperanza in the Purus region near Brazil, to Iñapari.
Three highly important protected areas lie in its path, including the Madre de Dios Reserve for uncontacted Indians.
The project notably omits reference to uncontacted tribes, as well as opposition from the regionâs indigenous peoples, who make up 80% of the population.Â
 Evidence of illegal logging along proposed route of road.
 © Survival
They fear the road will attract an onslaught of illegal loggers and colonists who would devastate their forest and the uncontacted Indians living there.
In an appeal to Congress, indigenous organization ORAU said, âDo not get carried away by a small group of legislators who want to turn the Purus into a desertâ.Â
Puerto Esperanzaâs Catholic priest Miguel Piovesan is widely considered to be the main driver behind the project.
In a recent leaked email Piovesan insisted, âThere is no danger of a logging invasionâ.
However Peruâs comprehensive failure to curb illegal logging in the Amazon has been internationally condemned. More than 114,000 people have signed a Survival petition to stop the invasion of illegal loggers on uncontacted tribesâ land.
Survival International's Director Stephen Corry said today, âIt is highly suspicious as to why Piovesan and his friends in Congress wish to build a road in an indigenous area that has almost no support from indigenous people. This âwe know whatâs best for youâ attitude is not only patronising, itâs deadly, as the last 500 years of colonialism and âdevelopmentâ of indigenous lands has shownâ.Â
 Source: http://www.survivalinternational.org/news/8300