Never-before-seen pictures capture the lives of Peruvian nomads who are untouched by civilization
Never-before-seen photos have emerged of one of the last the last uncontacted Amazon tribes who the Peru government is trying to appro...
https://newshelmng.blogspot.com/2015/07/never-before-seen-pictures-capture.html
Never-before-seen
photos have emerged of one of the last the last uncontacted Amazon
tribes who the Peru government is trying to approach after they shot and
killed two men in the chest with a bow and arrow.
For
600 years the Mashco Piro clan – also known as Cujareno people – have
lived in the forest in Peru close to the border with Brazil and had no
contact with the outside world.
But
recently – threatened by 21st century logging, drugs cartels and
tourism – the rarely seen indigenous tribe have broken cover from the
forest to raid villages for food, tools and weapons to hunt.
In May, Leonardo Perez, 20, was killed when he was shot with an arrow by tribe members who wanted his tools.
In 2011 local guide Shaco Flores (pictured above), a Matsigenka Indian, was murdered by the tribe.
Shaco had given them machetes, pots and pans for 20 years and had developed a good relationship with the clan.
But
it is believed he was killed with an arrow to the heart after he tried
to persuade them to settle and end to their nomadic hunter-gatherer
life.
‘The
Mashco Piro have been present in this area for as long as anyone can
remember, and have in a way been enticed out of their forest home onto
the riverbanks by missionaries and other missionised indigenous people,’
Rebecca Spooner for campaign group International Survival told
MailOnline.
‘They have been given pots and land and machetes, and are now asking for more.’
The
increasing contact between the Mashco Piro people and other indigenous
communities is slowly peeling back the layers of secrecy that have
shielded them from modern society.
Members
of the tribe have been spotted a record 100 times already this year,
Peru's deputy culture minister Patricia Balbuena said.
While others have even left the forest and now live among the neighbouring Yine Indians, who speak a similar language.