An advocacy group for Indigenous peoples has released photographs of a reclusive tribe's members searching for food on a beach in the Peruvian Amazon, calling it evidence that logging concessions are ''dangerously close'' to the tribe's territory.
Survival International said the photos and video it posted this week show members of the Mashco Piro looking for plantains and cassava near the community of Monte Salvado, on the Las Piedras River in Madre de Dios province.
Several logging companies hold timber concessions inside territory inhabited by the tribe, according to Survival International, which has long sought to protect what it says is the largest ''uncontacted'' tribe in the world. The proximity raises fears of conflict between logging workers and tribal members, as well as the possibility that loggers could bring dangerous disease to the Mashco Piro, the advocacy group said.
Two loggers were shot with arrows while fishing in 2022, one fatally, in a reported encounter with tribal members.
Cesar Ipenza, a lawyer who specializes in environmental law in Peru and is not affiliated with the advocacy group, said the new images ''show us a very alarming and also worrying situation because we do not know exactly what is the reason for their departure (from the rainforest) to the beaches.''
Isolated Indigenous tribes may migrate in August to collect turtle eggs to eat, he said.
''But we also see with great concern that some illegal activity may be taking place in the areas where they live and lead them to leave and be under pressure,'' he said. "We cannot deny the presence of a logging concession kilometers away from where they live.''
Survival International called for the Forest Stewardship Council, a group that verifies sustainable forestry, to revoke its certification of the timber operations of one of those companies, Peru-based Canales Tahuamanu. The FSC responded in a statement Wednesday that it would ''conduct a comprehensive review'' of the company's operations to ensure it's protecting the rights of Indigenous peoples.