"The forest is not a resource for us, it is life itself. It is the only place for us to live."

South & Central America 1991

Evaristo Nugkuag

Peru
Forests

 

Evaristo Nugkuag, a member of Peru's Aguaruna tribe, has organized indigenous people and forming creative alliances at local, national and international levels.

After studying medicine in Lima in the late 1970s, Nugkuag began rallying the Aguaruna Indians to gain control of their land. He soon realized that all Indians living in the Peruvian Amazon faced the same threats. Cattle ranching, mining and logging were destroying their forest home. Nugkuag set out to convince the different tribes to form a coalition of tribal groups. Known as the Alliance of the Indian Peoples of the Peruvian Amazon or AIDESEP, the organization represents 300,000 people. AIDESEP initiates projects that combine environmental and indigenous land objectives.

In 1984 Nugkuag took his organizing principles a step further and formed COICA, a federation of Indian organizations representing the national Indian organizations of the five Amazon Basin countries: Peru, Bolivia, Ecuador, Brazil and Colombia. Twenty five years ago there was little communication among the tribes of the same nation. Today, the COICA network represents over a million people from the 219 different indigenous groups pressing for Indian land rights in each of the five Amazon basin countries. As COICA's president, Nugkuag was able to build an important alliance between indigenous people and the international environmental community.

After Nugkuag's term as COICA's president expired in 1992, the organization relocated to Ecuador. Nugkuag continued to forge alliances, becoming president of the Alliance of European Cities and the Indigenous People of the Amazon for the Protection of Tropical Rainforests, Climate and Human Life. Today Peru's indigenous people face threats from oil exploration on their land. Ever in the public eye, Nugkuag plans to run for mayor of his municipality.

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