Archive for March 13th, 2014
Camlari, child-girl slave system in Nepal
Posted by: adonis49 on: March 13, 2014
Camlari, child-girl slave system in Nepal
I watched a documentary on ARTE yesterday.
There is a Taro native tribe in south west of Nepal, by India borders. They acquired immunity against paludism in these wet rice fields.
Since the women are expected to give birth almost every year, there is not enough resources to feed the ever expanding family.
And the girls, barely 6 of age, are sold to well-off families in Kathmandu. The rationale is that the family cannot afford to feed an extra mouth, and a girl to boot it.
The child-girl is supposed to be going to schools, but implicitly, the girl is sent to the fields to work as a slave and sleep in locked containers.
Camlari support groups are forming in order to educate the people and families on how the sold girls are being abused and mistreated. The law prohibit this slave system but the government is not about to apply the law.
The support groups have already freed 18,000 girls in the last decades.
What happens to these child-girls when they are freed? Who is to send them to schools and maintain them as free people?
Urmilla was sold at the age of 6 and returned to her village at the age of 17 and resumed her study. She is a member of the anti-camlari campaign and visit villages to educate the families and participate in stopping buses heading to Kathmandu and retrieving the kid-girls.
Aerial Footage of Amazon Tribe: Never contacted with and the first shot…
Posted by: adonis49 on: March 13, 2014
Aerial Footage of Uncontacted Amazon Tribe? The first shot…
How incredible it is to imagine that even today there is a tribe that has no contact with the civilized outside world!
This video from Survival International brings to you an unbelievable aerial footage of one of the most vulnerable people on Eartha tribe that inhabits the dense Amazon forests and is still light years away from civilization.
A campaign has been launched to save the tribe which is on the verge of getting wiped out.

Scott Wallace posted:
Officials from Brazil’s Indian affairs agency, FUNAI, say they have confirmed the existence of a previously unknown indigenous group in the rugged folds of the western Amazon.
The tribe, believed to number as many as 200 people, was initially discovered through the examination of satellite images of rain forest clearings and confirmed by aerial reconnaissance flights earlier this year.
The overflights revealed 3 separate clearings and 4 large communal dwellings, known as malocas, clustered in the dense jungles of the Javari Valley Indigenous Reserve in far western Brazil.
Specialists in matters pertaining to isolated Indians estimate the population of uncontacted tribes by examining the size and number of dwellings, as well as any gardens the inhabitants might have under cultivation. The recently discovered tribe is reported to have planted tracts of corn, banana, and low-to-the-ground bushes that might be peanuts or cassava.
Into the Jungle
The Javari — a sprawling rain forest reserve half the size of Florida — is home to the largest concentration of uncontacted tribes in the entire world.
There are at least 8 uncontacted indigenous communities, and perhaps as many as 14, inhabiting the upland forests in the headwaters of the rivers that drain the Vale do Javari Indigenous Land.
It’s an area with which I have more than a passing familiarity. In 2002, I accompanied a team from FUNAI’s elite unit, the Department of Isolated Indians, on a 3-month expedition through the reserve’s primeval forest to track a mysterious indigenous tribe known as the flecheiros — the Arrow People.
If true, the news would amount to a strong vindication of Brazil’s policy to locate and protect its isolated tribes.
Such isolated groups are highly susceptible to communicable diseases and to cultural dislocation unleashed by contact with the outside world. The Javari reserve is especially well protected from intrusions.
The territory is overseen by the Javari Valley Ethno-Environmental Protection Front — administratively part of the Department of Isolated Indians. The Front’s director Fabricio Amorim told the Estado de São Paulo newspaper that the settlement appears to have been built within the past year.
The Front operates 3 control posts along major rivers leading into the depths of the reserve, and the Javari Valley remains a bastion of tribal vitality and a rich repository of biodiversity.
Not the Only Ones
FUNAI has now confirmed the existence of more than two dozen uncontacted tribes within Brazil’s national territory, more than any other country in the world.
The Department of Isolated Indians has received reports of dozens of others, but they have yet to be confirmed. Peru comes second, with 15 such groups roaming its Amazonian regions. They are under mounting threat from loggers, gold prospectors, and energy companies exploring for oil in the deep jungle. Peru recently announced new measures to protect its isolated tribes.
Scott Wallace writes about the environment and indigenous affairs for National Geographic and other publications. His forthcoming book, The Unconquered: In Search of the Amazon’s Last Uncontacted Tribes, will be published by Crown in October 2011. For more information, please visit www.scottwallace.com.
http://gulfnews.com/news/region/syria/syria-s-al-assad-visits-refugees-near-damascus-1.1303025

Political leaders: Dressed for war drags
Posted by: adonis49 on: March 13, 2014
Political leaders: Dressed for war drags
In a political critique with a cutting comical tone, artist saint hoax has created a series of short animated gifs, which transform international political leaders into elaborately dressed-up drag queens.
From Russia’s vladamir putin to america’s former president george bush, the government chiefs are reworked into female forms, wearing ornate jewels and extravagant hairdos. struck by the richness of the glamor oriented culture, saint hoax subsequently bridged a connection to the bureaucratic sphere.
saint hoax dresses political leaders for war drags you out
‘It got me thinking that behind every ‘great’ man, there’s a queen.’ saint hoax describes the commentary the collection of moving images makes.
He resumed: ‘like drag queens, political/religious leaders are expected to entertain, perform and occasionally lip-sync a public speech. but unlike drag queens, the fame hungry leaders don’t know when to take their costumes off.’
vladdy pushin’ (1952)
baricka o’bisha (1961)
kimmy jungle (1983)
madame o’ sane (1937-2006)
hitleria hysteria (1889-1945)
ossie b’ (1957-2011)
queen abby (1924)
saint hoax dresses political leaders for war drags you out
(above) georgia buchette (1946)
all gifs courtesy of saint hoax