Skip to Navigation | Skip to Content | Leap to Bottom

Amazon Indian warns UN of ‘major suffering’ of his people - Survival International

19.10.11

Amazon Indian warns UN of ‘major suffering’ of his people - Survival International

Raoni Metuktire, a spokesman of the Kayapó tribe of the Brazilian Amazon, traveled to the United Nations in Geneva last month, to warn of the devastation that a planned mega-dam would bring to his people.

Raoni warned that the Belo Monte dam project is causing ‘major suffering and negative effects for my people and my relatives’.

The Belo Monte dam, if built, would be the third largest in the world and would greatly harm the forest and lives of thousands of indigenous people, including uncontacted Indians.

It would drastically reduce fish stocks upon which local communities rely for their nutrition, and bring deforestation.

Raoni told UN officials, ‘I am concerned for my people, rivers, land, animals, trees; I want to protect them… If there are no trees on the land, if they burn (the trees), what do we do? What about us?’

He continued, ‘I want all the indigenous peoples of the world to be left in peace, because we all have rights, we are citizens of the world’.

Watch a clip of Raoni warning of the dangers the dam would bring.

The Brazilian government allowed the construction of the dam to commence, despite widespread concerns of indigenous peoples, river communities, scientists, Brazil’s Public Ministry and the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.


Read the full article … 

Dispatch: Aboriginal Press Media Group  |   Permalink  |   [19.10.11]  |   0 comments

5642010009736178526

»  {Newer-Posts} {Older-Posts}  «

0 Comments:

Post a Comment



 / 19.10.11 / 2011/10/#5642010009736178526




Aboriginal News Group

Contributing Editors, International Correspondents & Affiliates




This is an Ad-Free Newswire


#ReportHate
============
Southern Poverty Law Center


This site uses the Blogspot Platform



Impressum

Inteligenta Indigena Novajoservo™ (IIN) is maintained by the Aboriginal Press News Service™ (APNS) a subset of the Aboriginal News Group™ (ANG). All material provided here is for informational purposes only, including all original editorials, news items and related post images, is published under a CC: Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 license (unless otherwise stated) and/or 'Fair Use', via section 107 of the US Copyright Law). This publication is autonomous; stateless and non-partisan. We refuse to accept paid advertising, swag, or monetary donations and assume no liability for the content and/or hyperlinked data of any other referenced website. The APNS-ANG and its affiliate orgs do not advocate, encourage or condone any type/form of illegal and/or violent behaviour.