PIACI

Yaku Mama Amazon Flotilla on its way to Atalaia do Norte - Brazil.Photo: Hackeo Cultural
Flotilla, News

Javari Valley: Where Defending Life Means Respecting the Right to No-Contact

Javari Valley: Where Defending Life Means Respecting the Right to No-Contact Logbook of the Visit to the Yavarí Valley on the Road to COP30 From the Amazon River After navigating from the Ecuadorian Andes and crossing Peru via the Napo and Amazon rivers, we arrived in one of the most remote and sensitive regions on the planet: the Javari Valley, at the triple border of Brazil, Peru, and Colombia. At this meeting point of waters and borders, we brought our message to the heart of the world’s largest refuge for Indigenous Peoples in Isolation and Initial Contact (PIACI): peoples who choose to live without contact with outside society and whose existence depends directly on the integrity of the forests that shelter them. “We are born of water, and to water we return, because where water is born, life is born; and where life is born, a people is born.” — Yaku Mama Amazon Flotilla From the peaks of Cayambe to the Yasuní, we sail to transform the pain of extractivism into collective strength. In the Javari Valley, that strength translated into an urgent call to protect the lives of those who only ask that their right to exist be respected. A Border Under Pressure The Javari Valley is not just a sanctuary of biodiversity: it is a territory under siege. Routes for drug trafficking, logging, illegal hunting, and mining converge here, in one of the most fragile and dangerous areas of the Amazon. It is also the territory where, in 2022, journalist Dom Phillips and indigenist Bruno Pereira were murdered while documenting these very threats. The Flotilla’s crew met with representatives of the Union of Indigenous Peoples of the Javari Valley (UNIVAJA) to learn firsthand about the situation of the PIACI. They also shared experiences with members of the Regional Organization of Indigenous Peoples of the East (ORPIO) from Peru, who, alongside UNIVAJA, are leading the Javari–Tapiche Territorial Corridor initiative—a transboundary effort seeking to protect over 16 million hectares of continuous forests, ensuring the physical and cultural survival of the PIACI. A recent report from the GTI-PIACI (2024) confirmed an alarming trend: 50% of the territories of Indigenous Peoples in Isolation in South America overlap with 4,665 mining concessions or applications, many related to “critical” minerals for the so-called energy transition. Gold accounts for 42% of these pressures, followed by tin (24%) and lithium (10%). In Brazil, where much of the Javari Valley is located, 58 PIACI records are directly affected by these activities. Risk maps created by local organizations also reveal the expansion of drug trafficking routes, illegal roads, and extractive operations within territories that should remain untouched. “The protection of the Javari–Tapiche Corridor is not just a local issue; it is a global responsibility. Guaranteeing the legal security of these territories and strengthening Indigenous governance is the most effective strategy to conserve the Amazon.”— Wakemo, young Waorani spokesperson for the Yaku Mama Amazon Flotilla A Lethal and Invisible Threat The lack of official recognition and demarcation of PIACI territories not only violates fundamental rights but also puts lives at immediate risk. Their high immunological vulnerability, a result of centuries of isolation, means that even a common cold introduced by an invader can be fatal. Documented cases from past decades show how simple, accidental contacts led to the disappearance of entire peoples. Therefore, preventive protection, through exclusion zones and permanent monitoring, is the only truly ethical and viable policy. Demands for COP30: No to an Energy Transition at the Expense of the PIACI As the Flotilla advances towards Manaus and then Belém, where its journey will culminate at COP30, it carries a firm message: the energy transition cannot replicate fossil fuel injustices or sacrifice Indigenous territories in the name of the climate. From the heart of the Amazon, the Flotilla will demand: The Silence That Also Speaks The Peoples in Isolation have no speakers at summits or in the media. Their silence is, in itself, a form of resistance and a call to humanity. The Yaku Mama Amazon Flotilla sails for them, for the rivers, and for the rights the world has yet to hear. Because to defend their existence is to defend the balance of the entire planet. “We continue sailing, carrying the voices of those who defend life, and the silence of those who only ask for their right to exist to be recognized.”

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Press Release: The Yaku Mama Amazon Flotilla Embarks on a Historic Journey to COP30

Press Release: The Yaku Mama Amazon Flotilla Embarks on a Historic Journey to COP30 QUITO, ECUADOR – October 16, 2025. The “Yaku Mama Amazon Flotilla“ is launching a symbolic journey from the city of Coca in Ecuador to demand a new paradigm: placing the Amazon at the heart of the fight for climate justice and promoting an end to fossil fuel extraction and use. Connecting the Andes to the Amazon, a coalition of 60 Indigenous and territorial organizations, alongside allies from around the world, will travel more than 3,000 kilometers toward COP30, to be held in Belém, Brazil, in early November. This journey is not just an act of protest but a powerful demand: climate justice must become a reality, and fossil fuel extraction in the Amazon must end now.  The flotilla participants previously gathered in Quito as a starting point. This choice was not merely symbolic but sought to confront history: it was from this city, in 1541, that Francisco de Orellana’s expedition departed, culminating in the ‘discovery’ of the Amazon River. Today, the “Yaku Mama Amazon Flotilla” symbolically reverses that route of conquest into one of connection, honoring the resistance of Indigenous Peoples and the first continental uprising of 1992, with the goal of making the world finally listen to the voices of the territories. “This journey is an act of resistance and empowerment that links the climate crisis to its colonial and extractivist roots, positioning the peoples who have contributed least to it as the most affected. It is an urgent call to COP30 to recognize that true climate justice is born from the land, flows with its rivers, and is sustained by those who protect it,” stated Lucía Ixchú, a Maya K’iche’ Indigenous woman from Guatemala and spokesperson for the flotilla. To begin the journey, the flotilla’s crew, together with ally organizations, will hold a symbolic funeral to bid farewell to the era of fossil fuels that has devastated the Amazon. This collective action denounces the false solutions that, in the name of the energy transition, continue to impose extractive projects and new sacrifice zones on Indigenous territories. In response, the Amazonian peoples reclaim their right to decide over their territories and to lead the way toward a just and living transition without creating new sacrifice zones through mining, oil spills, and monocultures. The Yaku Mama Amazon Flotilla demands a truly fair and binding energy transition. Indigenous Peoples urge governments and companies to ensure that any clean energy project respects Free, Prior, and Informed Consent (FPIC) and puts an end to fossil fuel developments that jeopardize their territories and ways of life. At the same time, they call for the recognition and protection of intangible zones for Indigenous Peoples in Isolation and Initial Contact (PIACI), whose existence and well-being depend on territories free from exploitation. Protecting these forests not only guarantees the survival of these peoples but also preserves biodiversity, maintains global climate balance, and ensures the quality of life for all inhabitants of the planet. The journey begins at a critical time for the Amazon. According to a report presented by the Monitoring of the Andean Amazon Project (MAAP) last year, 2024 marked a devastating record with the loss of 4.5 million hectares of primary forest due to deforestation and fires. This destruction is driven by the advance of extractivism; the same study reveals that deforestation from gold mining has increased by over 50% since 2018, with 36% of it occurring within protected areas and Indigenous territories. The River That Flows: from History to Hope “We are in Ecuador today for a very specific reason. Centuries ago, missions departed from Quito that claimed the ‘discovery’ of the Great Amazon River, bringing conquest to our territories,” affirmed Leo Cerda, a Kichwa Indigenous person from Napo, Ecuador. “We too have come to Quito, that historic starting point, to reclaim this route. And on October 16th, from Francisco de Orellana—the city of Coca—we will embark on a new journey that honors the memory of struggle and resistance of the Amazonian Indigenous Peoples. We also dedicate this journey to the memory of October 12th as a symbol of the resilience of the Peoples of the Americas. We set out not to conquer, but to connect; so that the world, finally, will listen to the voices of the territory,” he added. The flotilla is composed of a delegation of fifty people, including representatives of Indigenous peoples and civil society organizations from the Amazon, Mesoamerica, the Republic of Congo, and Indonesia. It will travel the Amazon River to denounce the “scars of extractivism”—such as illegal mining and deforestation—and, at the same time, highlight the strength of the living alternatives in their communities, such as productive enterprises, territorial monitoring, and ancestral science. The Era of Fossil Fuels in the Amazon Must End Fossil fuels not only harm the environment; they are a driver of social violence.  Worldwide, especially in the Amazon, defending the territory has become a death sentence. According to the latest report from Global Witness, published in 2024, between 2012 and 2024 alone, at least 2,253 defenders have been murdered or have disappeared, 40% of whom were Indigenous. Violence against the Amazon is manifested in the silent expansion of the oil and fossil gas industry. Between 2012 and 2020, the number of exploitation fields increased by 13%, and today, extraction is present in eight of the nine Amazonian countries. According to InfoAmazonia and Arayara, oil exploration overlaps with 441 ancestral territories and 61 natural protected areas, devouring the rainforest and directly threatening the lives and self-determination of Indigenous peoples. Across the Pan-Amazon, there are 933 oil and gas blocks, of which 472 are in Brazil, 71 in Ecuador, 59 in Peru, and 47 in Colombia, many located within protected areas or Indigenous territories. The impact of this industry is devastating: between 2000 and 2023, Peru recorded 831 oil spills, and Ecuador, 1,584 between 2012 and 2022. In Brazil, the attempt to open a new oil frontier at the mouth

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