In Forests Of Amazons In Peru, Indians Of Isolated Mashki-Piro Tribe Were Photographed

In the forests of the Amazons in the southeast of the Peru, during the deforestation of trees, the Indians of the isolated Mashko-Piro tribe were photographed.

This was reported in the Survival International – a British human rights organization, who leads for the rights of indigenous peoples and/or peoples leading a tribal lifestyle, as well as peoples that they do not contact.

as follows from the message, the natives were seen just a few kilometers from the logging area.

The pictures taken in the Monte-Salvado area fell more than 50 members of the Mashko-Piro tribe. In the vicinity of Puerto-Nuevo, the authorities discovered another group of 17 people.

Survival International volunteers claim that logging work for the indigenous peoples to leave places of residence.

In NPOs, they require cancel the licenses for deforestation for all companies operating in the region, and transfer the land to the Mashko-Piro Indians.

It is believed that the Mashko-pies living deep in the tropical forests of the southeast of Peru is the most non-contact tribe on Earth, numbering more than 750 people.