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Peru: Isolated Mashco-Piro Indians Appear On Busy River Bank

Mashco Piro

First Posted: 01/31/2012 11:17 am Updated: 01/31/2012 4:27 pm

By FRANK BAJAK, Associated Press

LIMA, Peru — Peruvian authorities say they are struggling to keep outsiders away from a clan of previously isolated Amazon Indians who began appearing on the banks of a jungle river popular with environmental tourists last year.

The behavior of the small group of Mashco-Piro Indians has puzzled scientists, who say it may be related to the encroachment of loggers and by low-flying aircraft from nearby natural gas and oil exploration in the southeastern region of the country.

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Clan members have been blamed for two bow-and-arrow attacks on people near the riverbank in Madre de Dios state where officials say the Indians were first seen last May.

One badly wounded a forest ranger in October. The following month, another fatally pierced the heart of a local Matsiguenka Indian, Nicolas "Shaco" Flores, who had long maintained a relationship with the Mashco-Piro.

The advocacy group Survival International released photos Tuesday showing clan members on the riverbank, describing the pictures as the "most detailed sightings of uncontacted Indians ever recorded on camera."

The British-based group provided the photos exactly a year after releasing aerial photos from Brazil of another tribe classified as uncontacted, one of about 100 such groups it says exist around the world.

One of the Mashco-Piro photos was taken by a bird watcher in August, Survival International said. The other two were shot by Spanish archaeologist Diego Cortijo on Nov. 16, six days before Flores was killed.

Cortijo, a member of the Spanish Geographical Society, was visiting Flores while on an expedition in search of petroglyphs and said clan members appeared across the river from Flores' house, calling for him by name.

Flores could communicate with the Mashco-Piro because he spoke two related dialects, said Cortijo, who added that Flores had previously provided clan members with machetes and cooking pots.

The Mashco-Piro tribe is believed to number in the hundreds and lives in the Manu National Park that borders Diamante, a community of more than 200 people where Flores lived.

Although it's not known what provoked the Mashco-Piro clan to leave the relative safety of their tribe's jungle home, Beatriz Huerta, an anthropologist who works with Peru's agency for indigenous affairs, speculated their habitat is becoming increasingly less isolated.

The upper Madre de Dios region where the tribe lives has been affected by logging, she said. "They are removing wood very close."

Meanwhile, Huerta said, naturalists in the area and Manu National Park officials told her during a recent visit that a rise in air traffic related to natural gas and oil exploration in the region is adversely affecting native hunting grounds, forcing increasing migration by nomadic tribes.

The clan that showed up at the river is believed to number about 60, including some 25 adults, said Carlos Soria, a professor at Lima's Catholic University who ran Peru's park protection agency last year.

"It seemed like they wanted to draw a bit of attention, which is a bit strange because I know that on other occasions they had attacked people," Cortijo said by phone from Spain. "It seemed they didn't want us to go near them, but I also know that the only thing that they wanted was machetes and cooking pots."

Cortijo said the group lingered by the river a few minutes, apparently to see if a boat would pass by so they could ask for some tools, something authorities say they had done in the past.

"The place where they are seen is one of heavy transit" of river cargo and tourist passage, and so the potential for more violent encounters remains high, Soria said.

That is compounded by culture clash. The Mashco-Piro live by their own social code, which Soria said includes the practice of kidnapping other tribes' women and children.

He said the Mashco-Piro are one of about 15 "uncontacted" tribes in Peru that together are estimated to number between 12,000 and 15,000 people living in jungles east of the Andes.

"The situation is incredibly delicate," said Huerta, the government anthropologist.

"It's very clear that they don't want people there," she said of the area where the clan has been loitering, noting that it had ransacked a jungle ranger's post that authorities later removed.

One of the clan's likely fears is being decimated by disease borne by outsiders, as has occurred with other uncontacted peoples, Huerta said.

But its also a mystery why they have appeared in an area so heavily trafficked, she added.

After the first sightings, and after tourists left clothing for the Mashco-Piro, state authorities issued a directive in August barring all boats from going ashore in the area. But enforcing it has been difficult as there are few trained and willing local officials.

Authorities say they aren't sure why Flores was killed. It could be that the Mashco-Piro were angry because he hadn't provided them with more machetes and cooking pots. Or perhaps it was because they considered the farming plot where he was killed too close to what they considered their territory.

Cortijo, the Spanish archaeologist, said the loss of Flores makes reaching any understanding with the Mashco-Piro very complicated.

"The problem is that 'Shaco' was the only person who could talk to them," he said. "Now that he's dead it's impossible to make contact."

___

Frank Bajak on Twitter: http://twitter.com/fbajak

Take a look at startling new photos of uncontacted tribes from Survival International below:
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A Mashco-Piro arrow, broad bamboo point with an eagle feather fletching and twine wrapping (© Glenn Shepard/www.uncontactedtribes.org)
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linton
Perseverance is one short race after another.
09:00 AM on 02/09/2012
Is 5 of 7 on a cell phone? If so who is the service provider? LOL
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butchcliff
The future is unwritten
07:05 AM on 02/08/2012
Massive destruction of the rain forests & further encroachments, will likely run more & more of these peoples out of their habitat.
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Bushido08
Spirit of a Warrior
05:25 PM on 02/07/2012
Well, all I got out of this entire article is some folks that live in the bushes with nothing have decided to take on the favorite American passtime...panhandling.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
1man1voicenovote
live simply so others may simply live
08:55 AM on 02/07/2012
I will suggest that the ending of the Mayan Calendar coincides with the prophetic EXTINCTION of Natural Man, and the rise to domination and eventual self destruction by our own Machine Age.

We are witnessing the extinction of a Race of Humans by our own Civilization and we make fun of their plight and pretend we don't know what they want. We blamed the Dodoe for it's own demise...and we will be mocked and blamed for our own, when the time comes.

oh the humanity
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Latzy von Biron
Just living is not enough.
03:46 AM on 02/07/2012
Time to open a McDonald's there ...... oh, and a Starbucks of course!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Imlostinwyoming
02:09 PM on 02/06/2012
Obviosly,they've heard about the new I phone and want one. No,seriosly they have seen what the modern world has to offer (Pots and pans,machittes,clothes and flying machines) and want in on the whole thing. Or, what if their dieing from our modern germs and sent this group to find help?
01:24 PM on 02/06/2012
If they knew what we know....they would run even deeper into the forest and never come out again.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
1man1voicenovote
live simply so others may simply live
08:40 AM on 02/07/2012
They ran right to the edge of their 'no contact' zone and realized they have nowhere else to go...
They look desperate.
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Non-Compassionate Liberal
Let's get ready to RUMBLE . . .
11:00 AM on 02/06/2012
Hey, the guy in the photo's sporting a neatly trimmed beard. He must have been an actor who posed for that photo. Hollywood must be promoting some new flick.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Louise Aloft
no man is an island
07:06 AM on 02/06/2012
they're probably pissed off at being called indians, still. i thought we had become more sophisticated.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
92102
Friends Don't Let Friends Watch FOX News
05:28 AM on 02/06/2012
Let's just hope for their sake (the Mashco-Piro) that missionaries don't show up to 'save' them.
08:29 AM on 02/06/2012
To be fair, we're quite a long ways away from Spaniards arriving and torturing those who refuse to convert. These days, missionaries don't tend to bring guns with them.
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Non-Compassionate Liberal
Let's get ready to RUMBLE . . .
11:01 AM on 02/06/2012
The missionaries will ruin them with or without guns.
02:22 AM on 02/06/2012
So, What would be the problem if they just didn't want anything to do with you or your ways or laws?
There is always force and control. Right? Another few tax payers to contribute?
02:03 AM on 02/06/2012
"The behavior of the small group of Mashco-Piro Indians has puzzled scientists, who say it may be related to the encroachment of loggers and by low-flying aircraft from nearby natural gas and oil exploration in the southeastern region of the country."

This alone says a lot towards the mentality of modern society and what we have become, compared to what these people have. To couple that with the invasionious, controlling, mentality, and lack of morals we have grown is sickening.
06:10 PM on 02/05/2012
While on an op in northwest S. America my team ran into an especially strange group of indigenous people. We all looked at each other for what seemed an eternity then I ordered to take cover and set up a perimeter. Never heard them slip away. Insightful yet the hinkiest thing that ever happened to me.
Fear is the most destructive evil of humans.
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Micheal Johnson
02:41 PM on 02/05/2012
There are some people that miss the point. They say they are killing people without questioning why. Maybe these -uncontacted people- don't want to be -contacted. They are probably wondering what is so special about -modernised- man.
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CymroTramor
saysomethinginwelsh
08:06 PM on 02/04/2012
so they killed the only man who could speak to them and help them....cutting off their nose to spite their face
02:05 AM on 02/06/2012
What makes you think they need your help?
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Hjorlejf
11:30 AM on 02/06/2012
To be fair, they did want our machetes and pots.