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Logger operating near separated Peru people gets accreditation suspended

An international forestry group has suspended the sustainability certification of a logging company operating on land near an uncontacted tribe in Peru's Amazon, the NGO Survival International stated on Monday, handing a preliminary triumph to groups requiring a stop to logging in the area.

The Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) withdrew its accreditation of the Canales Tahuamanu business for 8 months after members of the Mashco Piro tribe were seen in late June in a remote location of the Madre de Dios region of Peru, the NGO stated.

It stated the FSC accreditation would be suspended from Sept. 13 while the forestry group examines the case and meets Peruvian authorities to understand the land category issues in the Andean country.

Peru's government and Canales Tahuamanu did not immediately reply to an ask for comment.

The Mascho Piru are leaving their shelters to leave from loggers who have actually forestry concessions approved by the authorities, according to indigenous companies in Peru.

According to the FSC and Peru's Forest and Wildlife Resources Supervisory Agency, the Canales Tahuamanu logging company has concessions on nearly 53,000 hectares of forest in Madre de Dios where it extracts cedar and mahogany.

This is an important action, however not the last one, Julio Cusurichi, a member of the indigenous company AIDESEP, stated in the declaration from Survival International. We will continue battling with the exact same strength up until we attain a historic success in favor of the rights of individuals.

(source: Reuters)