Officials in Peru on Sept. 5 voted against a proposal to create an indigenous reserve in the country's Amazonian region, where isolated tribes face threats from logging, mining and drug trafficking. The decision will likely delay efforts to protect them by several years and could lead to their displacement, critics said.
The proposed Yavarí Mirim Indigenous Reserve would have protected 1.17 million hectares (2.9 million acres) of Amazon rainforest in the Loreto region, an area a fifth the size of Ireland that’s home to several Indigenous communities living in isolation. A commission reviewed anthropological evidence of the communities' presence in the area but voted in line with the interests of business sectors and forestry concessions.
"With this decision, the Peruvian state has chosen to favor economic and criminal interests over the [isolated peoples'] right to live in peace and dignity," the Regional Organization of Indigenous Peoples of the Peruvian Amazon (ORPIO) said in a statement after the vote. "This represents a historic setback in human rights and an assault on the Amazon and its Indigenous peoples."
The commission voted eight against and five in favor.
The Matsés, Matis, Korubo, Kulina-Pano and Flecheiro indigenous peoples live in isolation on a border area with Brazil, leaving longhouses, gardens, tools and remains of campfires as anthropological evidence of their existence.
For years, Peruvian officials denied [7] reports [8] that the groups were real. It wasn’t until 2018 that they issued an official decree [9] recognizing them. Today, there an estimated 640 people in their communities.
But full legal protection for the territory only comes with a demarcated reserve, advocates said.
The process involves filing a study with the Multisectoral Commission for Indigenous Peoples in Voluntary Isolation and Initial Contact (PIACI), part of the Ministry of Culture. The commission reviews arguments for why the reserve is necessary and where the boundaries would be drawn. If approved, officials have to create a management plan and other policies to protect the communities.
The Ministry of Culture already recognizes eight [10] Indigenous and territorial reserves in Peru, three of them at least partially in Loreto.
ORPIO and the Interethnic Association for the Development of the Peruvian Rainforest (AIDESEP) first proposed the Yavarí Mirim Indigenous Reserve in 2003. But the studies kept getting rejected or postponed.
This time around, the commission postponed [11] the meeting in January. Even after members of ORPIO met with President Dina Boluarte and her cabinet, the meeting was postponed again in June, leading to criticism from advocacy groups that the process had become corrupt and politicized.
The country's PIACI law requires officials to create conditions for protecting isolated peoples, ORPIO leaders said.
"It's necessary to categorize the reserve, it is absolutely necessary," ORPIO legal specialist Federico Guaneryes Contreras Espinoza told Mongabay. "Not only from a population-protection perspective, but also because it is an obligation of the state."
From Mongabay [12], Sept. 8
See our last report on Peru's termed isolated peoples [13].