Survival International

Help protect the Mashco Piro and their rainforest from destruction

Several Mashco Piro men standing on a beach river bank.
 

The Mashco Piro are believed to be the largest uncontacted tribe on Earth. But only some of their territory is currently protected –  the rest has been sold off as logging concessions. One logging company, called Canales Tahuamanu, has already bulldozed more than 120 miles of logging roads into the rainforest.

The Mashco Piro’s survival is on a knife edge. They face three deadly threats:

  1. As logging activity increases, the likelihood of a deadly encounter between the Indigenous people and the loggers also grows.
  2. The new roads provide an easy way into the forest for settlers and colonists who will soon destroy the rainforest.
  3. As outsiders flood in, they are highly likely to introduce common Western diseases like flu or measles to which the Mashco Piro have no immunity. Such an epidemic would cause mass casualties.

The Peruvian authorities have previously recognized that the whole of this area is Mashco Piro territory, but after intense lobbying by the loggers, they refused to expand the protected area.

Please tell them that they must now expand the protected area to include all the Mashco Piro land, and revoke the logging licenses that have been granted.
 

Your email will be sent to:
President of Peru, Dina Boluarte
the Minister of Culture, Fabricio Alfredo Valencia Gibaja
the President of the Council of Ministers, Gustavo Lino Adrianzén Olaya
the Minister of Justice and Human Rights, Eduardo Melchor Arana Ysa
the Minister of Development and Social Inclusion, Julio Javier Demartini Montes
the Minister of Women and Vulnerable Populations, Angela Teresa Hernandez Cajo
the Minister of Environment, Juan Carlos Castro Vargas
the Minister of Health, César Henry Vásquez Sánchez
the Minister of the Interior, Juan José Santiváñez Antúnez
the Director of the Directorate of Indigenous People in Isolation and Initial Contact of MINCUL, María Amelia Trigoso Barentze
the Director of the Directorate General for the Rights of Indigenous Peoples of the Ministry of Culture, Ricardo Miguel García Pinedo

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