Published: 7:11AM Thursday August 13, 2009
Source: Reuters
Source: The Amazon
Members of an Amazon tribe have tested positive for the new H1N1
swine flu, Peruvian health officials said, raising concerns the
deadly virus could spread to more remote communities with limited
defences against disease.
The seven cases, reported in the Matsigenka tribe, were confirmed
by the health ministry's regional office in south-eastern Peru.
All seven people have recovered.
But because the tribe makes its home along the Urubamba River, near
a reserve set aside for so-called un-contacted tribes, human rights
groups fear the H1N1 virus could spread to the more isolated
people.
Communities living in voluntary isolation have historically been
vulnerable to diseases brought by outsiders, with indigenous
populations in the Americas having suffered centuries of losses
after Europeans arrived.
"Isolated tribes have no immunity to the infectious diseases that
circulate though our industrial society and will be particularly
susceptible to swine flu," Dr Stafford Lightman, a professor of
medicine at Britain's Bristol University, said in a statement by
London-based rights group Survival International.
H1N1 swine flu has spread around the world since it emerged in
April, killing more than 1,400 people and sickening hundreds of
thousands.
The World Health Organisation estimates the virus could
eventually affect two billion people.
Peru, which is considering the creation of five new reserve areas,
frequently comes under fire from critics who contend it does not do
enough to protect remote jungle tribes.
Estimates of how many un-contacted tribes there are in Peru and
neighbouring Brazil vary widely, from several to 100.
The Peruvian Amazon has vast, and still largely untapped, oil and
natural gas reserves and the government is encouraging companies to
invest there as a way to spur economic growth and transform the
country into a net energy exporter.
Peru's un-contacted tribes are being threatened by illegal loggers,
energy workers, ranchers, poachers and overzealous tourists, said
Survival International's director, Stephen Corry.
"In times of a global pandemic, it is even more important than ever
that their land rights are recognized and protected before it is
too late," he said.
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