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We, the Undersigned, endorse the following petition:

Come together to defy the ¨most damaging project in the Amazon Basin¨

Target: Ray Hunt, CEO, Hunt Oil
Sponsor: Ari Berk
  • Signatures: 1,064
  • Goal: 10,000
  • Deadline: 1-22-2005
Tell Hunt Oil, main beneficiary of the "most damaging project in the Amazon Basin," to stop! The project involves irreversible ecological damage to the remote Camisea region -- possibly the most biologically diverse place on earth -- and killing-off the local people.

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Number Date Name Why do you oppose drilling in biologically vital and inhabited rainforest?
1,064 8:14 pm PST, Mar 8 Trevor Falkenhagen  
1,063 6:52 pm PST, Feb 22 Cher Isbell  
1,062 10:53 am PST, Feb 12 Anton Oscar Iorga  
1,061 4:37 pm PDT, May 8 Tiffany Guthrie  
1,060 9:05 pm PDT, Apr 30 Amy Zellweger  
1,059 8:38 am PDT, Apr 4 Patsy Halloway  
1,058 10:57 am PST, Feb 6 Christine Iadeluca  
1,057 1:47 pm PST, Feb 3 dave sennett  
1,056 12:43 pm PST, Jan 14 Anonymous  
1,055 3:01 am PST, Jan 10 Maureen Slater I oppose anything that interferes with the beautiful natuural habitat and wild life
1,054 10:43 am PST, Dec 30 Aiz T  
1,053 1:23 pm PST, Dec 24 Anonymous  
1,052 1:39 pm PST, Dec 21 Danille Baptista All life is sacred! Just ask God. Aho Mitakuye Oyasin, and Amen.
1,051 12:21 pm PST, Dec 4 Konrad Kołaczkowski  
1,050 11:51 am PST, Nov 30 Jennifer Megeney  
1,049 5:16 pm PST, Nov 28 Anonymous Driiling sucks it is all about greed and should be stoped expecially in the rainforest alot animal species will go extinct and it also hurts the planet.
1,048 9:09 am PST, Nov 27 christi Vineyard  
1,047 7:12 pm PST, Nov 24 Emily MacDonald  
1,046 4:56 pm PST, Nov 15 Andrea Pearl  
1,045 1:53 pm PDT, Oct 15 Lindsay Garcia When we destroy the rainforests we are not only destroying the plant life (which is very importent), but we are also killing the animals who depend on the rainforest for servival. There are also manny native people who depend on the rainforest for food. The planet Earth is in enough trouble as it is with global worming and other problems, we dont need to add the extinction of hundreds of plants and animals, not to mention all of the other problems we will caus by doing this. The plant life healps heal the earth by giving off oxygen, if we destroy this we will be destroying those who are fixing the Earth we are slowly destroying. The worlds wildlife is becoming extinct fast enough, there is no reason for us to help it along. To the people doing these tarrible things to the Earth my letter as well as all the other peoples letters who care may not effect you, and you may not even stop to consider it. This is because there is only one thing being considered, and that is money, how much money can I make and how fast can I make it. It makes me sad to think about the world my future genorations will be living in.
1,044 7:17 pm PDT, Oct 13 Ceci Madruga  
1,043 4:47 pm PDT, Oct 7 Anonymous  
1,042 7:44 am PDT, Oct 4 april rissel  
1,041 9:45 pm PDT, Sep 21 r Johnson  
1,040 10:02 pm PDT, Sep 14 Carl Propst Because of the environmental damage it would cause to the animals and people who live there.
1,039 5:34 am PDT, Sep 10 Dagmar Four Bears  
1,038 2:04 am PDT, Sep 7 Louis Bauer  
1,037 2:32 pm PDT, Sep 3 Linda Bonura  
1,036 10:21 pm PDT, Sep 2 Richard Hannah If you will never stop thrashing the rainforest for your greedy selvs then one of these days you'll be in a lot of hurt.
1,035 9:46 am PDT, Aug 28 Louis Murray  
1,034 6:22 am PDT, Aug 28 Linda Bonura  
1,033 4:43 pm PDT, Aug 26 Linda Hirdes Because there ought to be places on this planet where mankind cannot, at will for profit and greed (or scientic research), be free to roam and destroy by drilling, mining, bulldozing, logging, building, experimenting and just generally disrespecting. In the mist of global warming, plant life is our only hope to deal with the inevidable effects of carbon dioxide. Not only that, there will be a chain reaction, a domino effect, that will cause most species to become extinct. It is a very fragile ecosystem and some life forms we don't even know about will be lost forever.
1,032 12:34 pm PDT, Aug 9 Shivani Parsad  
1,031 10:06 pm PDT, Aug 2 Myla Aguilar You are ruining the ecosystem and wildlife in this unique region. This will cause an inbalance and is not fair to the people of this region nor the wildlife. Please stop thinking about money and start thinking about people and wildlife for a change!
1,030 10:27 pm PDT, Jul 23 KARLA GLOOR  
1,029 2:22 pm PDT, Jul 10 Sid Jennings  
1,028 3:56 pm PDT, Jul 8 Anonymous  
1,027 1:22 pm PDT, Jul 8 Joanne Russell  
1,026 12:14 pm PDT, Jul 8 Sandy Kusch It should be criminal to destroy that which is vital to the indigenos people that are there and have been there and have not bothered anyone in their existence. This is pure greed and negligence on the part of anyone who would go there and disrupt this vital rainforest area. The people who live there do not deserve to be put in this kind of danger either. Many will die from disease that is introduced as a result. We have lost enough of our rainforest areas. It is vital to leave what is left untouched!
1,025 11:17 am PDT, Jul 8 Zelda Wilson  
1,024 11:52 am PDT, Jun 30 kara martinez  
1,023 10:02 am PDT, Jun 30 Katherine Schwirzinski  
1,022 6:04 pm PDT, Jun 27 Brenda Schenk Why must mankind destroy everthing? Why are we such a selfish species that we put our own wants and needs ahead of all other species and ruin this planet for all?
1,021 2:11 pm PDT, Jun 26 Roxanne Acosta  
1,020 8:08 am PDT, Jun 22 Rui Magalhaes  
1,019 12:04 am PDT, Jun 19 Stoyka Chipchakova  
1,018 5:00 am PDT, Jun 18 Julie-anne Raso Everything shouldn't be destroyed by man.
1,017 8:22 pm PDT, Jun 5 Hector Navarro  
1,016 1:55 pm PDT, Jun 3 Ana Martins  
1,015 9:06 pm PDT, Jun 2 Colghan Castonguay  
1,014 7:51 am PDT, Jun 2 Candy Bowman-LeBlanc  
1,013 6:39 am PDT, May 27 Dave Steinmetz  
1,012 6:45 pm PDT, May 20 Christina Sott To plunder our last natural reserves and resources is suicide. Would be nice, if we ALL had a say in that!
1,011 12:54 pm PDT, May 16 Desiray Nagrone  
1,010 8:16 am PDT, May 7 Anonymous  
1,009 5:13 am PDT, May 1 Faith Cabanilla  
1,008 12:54 am PDT, Apr 27 Naomi Shank  
1,007 1:09 am PDT, Apr 18 steve wallis  
1,006 1:39 am PDT, Apr 15 Steve Klein  
1,005 6:33 am PDT, Apr 12 Teresita Garza  
1,004 4:26 pm PDT, Apr 11 Patricia Hewitt  
1,003 12:32 pm PDT, Apr 11 D White  
1,002 2:47 am PDT, Apr 5 Sara ------------ Because The Amazon has given us so much. It has helped us cure many Diseases and some scientist even think the cure for cancer can only be found in a plant that only grows in the Amazon so destroy the Amazon and destroy many lives with it... as you will do! and what about the The Machiguenga people, don't they have a say in it, the do happen to live in the Amazon. THINK first!
1,001 3:57 pm PDT, Apr 2 Anonymous  

Come together to defy the ¨most damaging project in the Amazon Basin¨

Just below the point where the Andes first begin to rise out of the Amazon Forest, the Urubamba River enters one of the most isolated places on earth. This still un-exploited and largely un-charted region of Amazonia is partially protected by Manu National Park on its edge; past the far border of the national park and at the center of the forest is the Nahua-Kugapakori Indian Reservation. This land was granted by the Peruvian government to the thousands of indigenous people of that area. Due to the inaccessability of their land, some of these people are still largely or even totally unaware of the outside world, that they are living on an Indian reservation, or that the country of Peru even exists. Also, due to the inaccessibility, stability, and natural-history of this area, the lower Urubamba river country has been proclaimed by numerous studies as the most biologically diverse on earth -- home to numerous ecosystem levels from lowland to cloud forests, rare black caimans, trees that -- according to legend -- walk on their roots, and the headwaters of the Amazon.

In the words of one study, the lower Urubamba is ¨the last place on earth¨ where anybody should be drilling for fossil fuels. Yet, inexplicably, in this heart of hearts of the Amazon Rainforest, the massive Camisea Gas Mega-Project is about to step in.

This project´s major corporate beneficiaries are White House connected Hunt Oil and Cheney subsidiary Halliburton Co.; both of these companies have terrifying, blundering environmental track records. Their plan is to build platforms, roads and a two pipelines from a huge concession in the middle of the forest and through the rugged Vilcabamba mountains, parts of which may have been untouched by human feet until explorers arrived in the 1960´s. 75 percent of Camisea platforms will likely be built in the Nahua-Kugapakori Reserve; this will not only disrupt the centuries-old ways of life of three or more nomadic tribes -- it also has historically meant, and is currently meaning, death for these people.

Though environmental impact reports have not been satisfactorily completed, construction in the lower Urubamba area is already under way, with little or no supervision. Massive erosion is ensuing. Environmental disruption has caused fish and wildlife to die off or disappear. This is not only a ripple of biological and ecological tragedy, it means isolated societies inside and outside of the reservation are now facing, possibly for the first time, that pre-imminent feature of our society - preventable chronic malnutrition.

At the same time, Camisea operatives are, for reasons of project productivity, actively and forcibly contacting uncontacted and voluntarily isolated tribes, in violation of the United Nations ILO Convention 169. This is ostensibly to sidestep the skirmishes which usually ensue in projects such as their´s, but the local peoples vulnerability is being actively -- and probably purposefully -- ignored.

However I, and we the undersigned, refuse to ignore the plight of these people and their land. We are
1) bearing in mind both the global and continent-wide environmental impact of pipe-line rupture, erosion, cultural degredation, and road building in the Urubamba.
2) bearing in mind that the Nahua tribe, first contacted in the 1980's during gas exploration in the region, lost nearly fifty-percent of its members to influenza and whooping cough epidemics in the few years following, and that now, as contact once again escalates in the latest stage of the project, stable, isolated or recently contacted tribes are once again being moved in upon by imported gastro-intestinal and respiratory diseases -- to which these Amazonian Indians still have no resistence. We refuse to allow this project to continue.

We the undersigned

1) absolutely discourage Hunt Oil from involvement in the Camisea Gas Project.

2) absolutely discourage Halliburton from involvement in the Camisea Gas Project.

3) oppose the continuation of the Camisea Gas Project, on grounds of its environmental unsoundness and human rights violation.

Note: This Come together to defy the ¨most damaging project in the Amazon Basin¨ petition was submitted by Ari Berk. ThePetitionSite.com is a free service provided to help concerned citizens rally support for issues they believe in. The opinions expressed by this petition do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of ThePetitionSite.com or Care2.com. There is no express or implied endorsement of this petition nor any newsletter offers (except those from Care2.com) by Care2.com, Inc, ThePetitionSite.com, or our sponsors. If you believe this system is being abused, please contact customer support.

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