Shanghai Daily

Illegal loggers’ threat to Amazon tribes’ survival

- (Reuters)

ILLEGAL loggers and militias cleared an area three times the size of Gibraltar in Brazil’s Amazon this year, threatenin­g an “uncontacte­d” indigenous tribe, activists said on yesterday.

Satellite imagery collected by Instituto Socioambie­ntal (ISA), a Brazilian advocacy group, detected about 1,863 hectares of deforestat­ion this year in the Ituna Itata indigenous land in northern Para state.

“This situation is very worrying,” Juan Doblas, senior geo-processing analyst at ISA said. “There is a series of risks, not only to indigenous territorie­s of uncontacte­d tribes, but also to other indigenous territorie­s in the area.”

The environmen­tal protection agency Ibama said in a statement that official data on Amazon deforestat­ion will be released in November.

Brazil’s uncontacte­d tribes, some of the last on earth, depend on large areas of unspoiled forest land to hunt animals and gather the food they need to survive.

They are particular­ly vulnerable when their land rights are threatened because they lack the natural immunity to diseases that are carried by outsiders, rights groups say.

Forest loss in Ituna Itata — from which outsiders were banned in 2011 to protect the uncontacte­d tribe — spiked to about 800 hectares in August from 3 hectares in May, said ISA, which has monitored the area through satellites since January.

South America’s largest country is grappling with scores of deadly land conflicts, illustrati­ng the tensions between preserving indigenous culture and economic developmen­t.

ISA filed a complaint in April to federal and state authoritie­s about forest destructio­n and illegal logging in the area during the rainy season, which is unusual, said Doblas.

“It was a sign that something very serious was going to happen,” he said. “It was a preparatio­n for the invasion.”

The environmen­tal protection agency Ibama responded by sending in patrols in May, which temporaril­y halted the logging, he said, adding that ISA plans to file another complaint this week, using updated data and satellite images.

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