Four Peruvian anti-logging activists murdered

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A Ka"apor Indian warrior uses a chainsaw to ruin one of the logs they found during a jungle expedition to search for and expel loggers from the Alto Turiacu Indian territory, near the Centro do Guilherme municipality in the northeast of Maranhao state in the Amazon basin, August 7Image source, Reuters
Image caption,

Illegal logging in the Amazon rainforest has pushed many indigenous people out of their ancestral land

Four Peruvian tribal leaders have been killed on their way to a meeting to discuss ways to stop illegal logging.

The men from the Ashaninka community were attempting to travel to Brazil when they were murdered,

Campaigners say the men had received several death threats from illegal loggers, who are suspected of being behind the killings.

Correspondents say indigenous people have felt under increasing threat from deforestation in recent years.

The men included the outspoken anti-logging activist Edwin Chota.

Mr Chota and three others were killed near Saweto on the border with Brazil, Peruvian officials said.

Officials said that they are believed to have been killed over a week ago as they attempted to travel to a meeting in Brazil.

A 2012 World Bank report, external estimates that 80% of Peruvian timber export stems from illegal logging.

Under threat

Professor David Salisbury from the University of Richmond knew Mr Chota for several years, and said that he was targeted because he "threatened to upset the status quo".

"The illegal loggers are on record for wanting Edwin dead," he told the Associated Press.

Mr Chota had campaigned against illegal logging for at least six years and written hundreds of letters to officials on the topic.

The BBC's Wyre Davies says indigenous peoples such as the Ashaninka have seen their numbers dwindle and their lands come under threat from development.

Recent footage of previously uncontacted Amazon tribes wandering into settled areas has raised fears that they are being forced out of their lands.