PRESS/SOCIAL MEDIA RELEASE   
Police Violently Attack Peaceful Indigenous Blockade in Peruvian Amazon, 
Killing Many

- Peruvian police reportedly shot indigenous protesters from helicopters -- as 
they were peacefully protecting their ancestral land.
  
  RENEWED CALL TO PROTEST/TAKE ACTION: Online affinity campaign demanding Peru 
respect indigenous rights continues at:
  http://www.rainforestportal.org/shared/alerts/send.aspx?id=peru_amazon

June 5, 2009
By Rainforest Rescue and Earth's Newsdesk, Ecological Internet
  http://www.regenwald.org/international/englisch/index.php
  http://www.ecoearth.info/newsdesk/

Peru's police have clashed with Amazon tribes opposed to foreign companies 
opening oil wells and mines in their rainforests without their consent. Police 
reportedly shot at protesters from helicopters, killing as many as twelve 
blockading a road to protect their land. Amazon Watch and Western media report 
indigenous protesters outside of Bagua, in a remote area of northern Peruvian 
Amazon, were forcibly dispersed by tear gas and real bullets. Reuters reports 
12 protesters were killed, while Agence France-Presse puts it at 9. It may have 
been worse.

The threat of continued violence is real and imminent. Some 30,000 indigenous 
people have blockaded roads, rivers and railways for months to demand repeal of 
new laws that allow oil, mining and logging companies to enter indigenous 
territories without their consent or even any consultation. Reinhard Behrend, 
Rainforest Rescue's Director, notes "it is important to realize that our 
overconsumption in the rich and emerging nations is at the root cause of deadly 
conflict for rainforests and Indians. We ask people to eliminate their use of 
industrially harvested timbers, oil and minerals from the world's rainforests, 
and protest this senseless violence at Peru embassies all over the world."

Indigenous communities complain that some 70% of Peruvian Amazon territory is 
now leased for oil and gas exploration, putting at risk their own lives and the 
biodiversity of the Amazon. Some of the controversial laws encouraging foreign 
investment in the Amazon were passed last year as President Garcia moved to 
bring Peru's regulatory framework into compliance with a free-trade agreement 
with the United States.

"The same indigenous abuses suffered historically to access resources by the 
West continue to this day. All Earth's citizens must demand the Peru government 
respect indigenous land rights, and pursue locally controlled ecologically 
sustainable development in the Amazon based upon the benefits of standing trees 
and intact ecosystems," says Dr. Glen Barry, Ecological Internet's President.

CONTACT: Dr. Glen Barry, [email protected]
Reinhard Behrendt, [email protected]

### ENDS ###

Ecological Internet provides the world's largest and most used climate and 
environment portals at http://www.climateark.org/ and http://www.ecoearth.info/ 
. Rettet den Regenwald (Rainforest Rescue) organizes protest actions and email 
protests against rainforest destruction by loggers, oil and mining companies, 
and development projects.

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