Logging companies keen to exploit Brazil's rainforest have been accused
by human rights organisations of using gunmen to wipe out the Awá, a
tribe of just 355. Survival International, with backing from Colin
Firth, is campaigning to stop what a judge referred to as 'genocide'
Gethin Chamberlain
The Observer, Sunday 22 April 2012
Trundling along the dirt roads of the Amazon, the giant logging lorry
dwarfed the vehicle of the investigators following it. The trunks of
nine huge trees were piled high on the back – incontrovertible proof of
the continuing destruction of the world's greatest rainforest and its
most endangered tribe, the Awá.
Yet as they travelled through the jungle early this year, the small team from Funai – Brazil's
National Indian Foundation – did not dare try to stop the loggers; the
vehicle was too large and the loggers were almost certainly armed. All
they could do was video the lorry and add the film to the growing
mountain of evidence showing how the Awá – with only 355 surviving
members, more than 100 of whom have had no contact with the outside
world – are teetering on the edge of extinction.
It is a scene
played out throughout the Amazon as the authorities struggle to tackle
the powerful illegal logging industry. But it is not just the loss of
the trees that has created a situation so serious that it led a
Brazilian judge, José Carlos do Vale Madeira, to describe it as "a real
genocide". People are pouring on to the Awá's land, building illegal
settlements, running cattle ranches. Hired gunmen – known as pistoleros
– are reported to be hunting Awá who have stood in the way of
land-grabbers. Members of the tribe describe seeing their families wiped
out. Human rights campaigners say the tribe has reached a tipping point
and only immediate action by the Brazilian government to prevent
logging can save the tribe.
This week Survival International will
launch a new campaign to highlight the plight of the Awá, backed by
Oscar-winning actor Colin Firth. In a video to be launched on Wednesday,
Firth will ask the Brazilian government to take urgent action to
protect the tribe. The 51-year-old, who starred in last year's hit movie
The King's Speech, and came to prominence playing Mr Darcy in the 1995 BBC adaptation of Pride and Prejudice, delivers an appeal to camera calling on Brazil's minister of justice to send in police to drive out the loggers.
... full story at The Guardian.
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