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Indigenous Guards in the Amazon region unite to protect their territories

Around 200 Indigenous members from Ecuador, Colombia and Peru met in the?Amazonian village of Sinangoe located along the border of Colombia to strategize together how to defend their ancestral land. To mark the occasion, they cleansed their energy with tobacco and nettle leaf and drank sap of the ancestral yoco tree. Indigenous communities of the Amazon rainforest train men and women for years to recognize threats to their mineral rich and verdant lands, and to prevent outsiders from entering their communities.

Members of the Indigenous Guard say that in recent years, threats to their ancestral Indigenous territories have increased the need for self-defense groups known as the Indigenous?Guard. They are facing illegal mining, logging, drug trafficking and armed groups as well as forced gang recruitment, extortion and forced recruitment.

Since 2017, the Indigenous Guard of the A'i Cofan Community in?Sinangoe has been battling large-scale mining to protect the Aguarico River – the main source of food for families who live on the riverbanks.

Holger Quenama is the coordinator of A'i Cofan's Indigenous Guard. The group's pacifist focus is on monitoring, patrolling and avoiding conflict. They may also request assistance from armed forces in situations that they are unable to handle themselves.

Quenama stated that their work had paid off, but they still need to put in daily effort. Quenama stated that "the Sinangoe guard is always carrying?our staff which is our strength." "We work with the whole community, but there are Indigenous groups who are more vigilant in patrolling all of the territory," Quenama said.

Kelly Valera Silva said that the Regional Organizaion of Indigenous guards of Shipibo Konibo in Peru has had success in combating illegal fishing and territorial invasions.

She said that although indigenous peoples were not opposed to?concession deals, they must acknowledge their territory.

About 300 indigenous guards are spread out across 24 Amazonian Shipibo Konibo communities in Peru. Reporting by Karen Toro, Sinangoe. Writing by Alexandra Valencia. Editing by Lincoln Feast.

(source: Reuters)