Army and National Police forces in Peru sent riverboats to evacuate a remote rainforest village after it was raided by an indigenous band that has long lived in voluntary isolation [5] in southeastern Madre de Dios region. Around 200 men armed with bows and arrows raided the community of Monte Salvado on the Río Piedras near the Brazilian border Dec. 19. The raiders—thought to be members of the Mashco-Piro [6] tribe—took machetes, rope, blankets and food in the attack. There were no injuries reported, although the raiders did fire arrows. After the raid, they retreated back into the forest. But fearing another attack, Monte Salvado residents—themselves of the Yine [7] tribe, a linguistically related group—are seeking refuge in Puerto Maldonado, the regional capital. Some 40 have now been evacuated.
This is the third time this year that Mashco-Piro tribesmen have arrived at Monte Salvador searching for food and metal objects. Madre de Dios indigenous organization FENAMAD [8] has asked Peru's government to take urgent measures to protect the Mashco-Piro's land, much of which has been taken over by illegal loggers and drug-traffickers. UK-based Survival International's director Stephen Corry said, "Uncontacted tribes are the most vulnerable societies on the planet. If the survival of the Mashco-Piro is to be guaranteed, Peru has to take action quickly, otherwise they risk being wiped out by diseases like flu and measles to which they have no resistance. The Mashco-Piro, like all uncontacted tribes, face catastrophe unless their land is protected." (The Guardian [9], BBC News [10], Peru This Week [11], Survival International [12], Dec. 23; Notimérica [13], Dec. 22)