Amazonian Siekopai tribe battles for return to ancestral land

They call themselves "the multicolored people," or Siekopai, after the eye-catching traditional body paint and adornments they used to wear

Published on Feb 10, 2023 07:19 PM IST 9 Photos
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Siekopai indigenous Roque Piaguaje during the second binational meeting of the Siekopai Nation community in the Amazon region in Lagartococha, Peru, on January 10. The Siekopai are one of 14 recognized Indigenous groups in Ecuador, a country where seven percent of the population identifies as such. (Pedro Pardo / AFP)

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Members of the Siekopai tribe seen at the representation of the union of families during the second binational meeting of the Siekopai Nation community in the Amazon region in Lagartococha, Peru, on January 10. Displaced by decades of war as well as commercial and cultural intrusions, the Siekopai eke out a living doing odd jobs in rural towns bordered by oil fields, palm plantations, and a network of busy roads. (Pedro Pardo / AFP)

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Siekopai indigenous women seen drying their clothes on tree branches in the Amazon region in Lagartococha. During the war between the neighbors from 1941 to 1998, intense fighting drove them from Pe'keya -- which the Siekopai claim once stretched some three million hectares (7.4 million acres) along the Lagartococha River, which forms part of the Ecuador-Peru border. (Pedro Pardo / AFP)

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An aerial view of the Aguarico river, in the Amazon region of Lagartococha, Peru, on January 12. With the Siekopai teetering on the brink of cultural extinction, their leaders say it is a matter of survival to reclaim their ancestral land -- still largely untouched in the remote heart of the Amazon. They call the homeland Pe'keya in the Paicoca language. (Pedro Pardo / AFP)

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"Our big dream is to rebuild our territory -- to reunite our nation, our families along these rivers that are home to the spirits and creatures my grandfather used to tell me about," community leader Justino Piaguaje told AFP at a recent, rare Siekopai reunion in Pe'keya. (Pedro Pardo / AFP)

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