BRASILIA (AFP) – Brazil has allowed the release of rare photographs of an uncontacted Amazonian tribe to bring attention to the plight of indigenous people who rights groups say are faced with possible annihilation. The astonishing images, showing curious adults and children peering skyward with their faces dyed reddish-orange and toting bows, arrows and spears, were taken by Brazil's National Indian Foundation (FUNAI). Rights group Survival International, which accompanied the government agency on the overflight near the Brazil-Peru border, said their baskets were full of papaya and manioc grown in a communal garden. "Illegal loggers will destroy this indigenous people. It is essential that the Peruvian government stop them before it is too late," warned Survival's director Stephen Corry. More>>
Tuesday, February 1, 2011
Lost tribes of the Amazon found
Undated handout released by Survival Int'l from a Brazilian observation plane of what they say are uncontacted Indians seen holding primitive weapons (AFP/FUNAI/Survival/Gleison Miranda)
Labels:
amazon tribe,
brazil,
Brazilian,
contact,
ethnic tribe,
Indian,
lost world,
mountain tribes,
Peru,
peruvian,
shamans
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