<font face="georgia,serif">Last Indians of the Amazon<br><br></font><font face="georgia,serif">Guardian Weekly, Thursday 27 March 2008
09.00 GMT</font><br>UK<br><font face="georgia,serif"><br>David Hill is a researcher and campaigner for Survival International, the international movement supporting tribal peoples worldwide. Last year he travelled to the Peruvian Amazon and spent months researching some of the world's last remaining uncontacted tribes. Peru is home to an estimated 15 of these tribes and all of them are facing extinction as oil companies and illegal loggers move in on the natural resources of their habitat. Isolated Indians are especially vulnerable to any contact because they have no immunity to outsiders' diseases.<br>
<br>Access full article below:<br><a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/mar/27/peru-international-aid-and-development">http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/mar/27/peru-international-aid-and-development</a><br> <br>
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