Permalink: https://media.greenpeace.org/archive/Munduruku-Chiefs-and-Greenpeace-at-Siemens-HQ-in-UK-27MZIFJJI7YJK.htmlConceptually similarMunduruku Chiefs and Greenpeace at Siemens HQ in UKGP0STQ1PHCompleted★★★★Munduruku Chiefs and Greenpeace at Siemens HQ in UKGP0STQ1PICompleted★★★★Munduruku Chiefs and Greenpeace at Siemens HQ in UKGP0STQ1PGCompleted★★★★Munduruku Chiefs and Greenpeace at Siemens HQ in UKGP0STQ1PLCompleted★★★★Munduruku Chiefs and Greenpeace at Siemens HQ in UKGP0STQ1POCompleted★★★★Munduruku Chiefs and Greenpeace at Siemens HQ in UKGP0STQ1PQCompleted★★★★Munduruku Chiefs and Greenpeace at Siemens HQ in UKGP0STQ1PSCompleted★★★★Munduruku Chiefs and Greenpeace at Siemens HQ in UKGP0STQ1PRCompleted★★★★★★Munduruku Chiefs and Greenpeace at Siemens HQ in UKGP0STQ1PTCompleted★★★★View AllGP0STQ1QCMunduruku Chiefs and Greenpeace at Siemens HQ in UKActivists dressed in monkey costumes take part in the action.Chief Arnaldo Kaba Munduruku and Ademir Kaba Munduruku, Indigenous People from the Tapajos Basin in the Amazon rainforest, have come to Siemens UK’s headquarters in Surrey to demand a meeting with their senior management. Siemens has been a key player in the last four megadams built in the Brazilian Amazon, and is one of just a handful of companies that can supply turbines for large-scale hydroelectric projects.The Munduruku delegation, General Chief Arnaldo Kaba Munduruku and his senior advisor Ademir Kaba Munduruku, have travelled all the way from the Tapajos Valley deep in the heart of the Amazon Rainforest to ask Siemens to publically state that they will not participate in plans to build new dams on their ancestral lands.Locations:Surrey-United Kingdom-Western EuropeDate:11 Aug, 2016Credit:© Chris J Ratcliffe / GreenpeaceMaximum size:4928px X 3280pxKeywords:Actions and protests-Animal likeness-Day-Direct communications-Forests (campaign title)-Greenpeace activists-KWCI (GPI)-Monkeys-Outdoors-Siemens AG-Theatrical costumesShoot:Munduruku Chiefs at Siemens HQ in UKA delegation of the Munduruku, Indigenous People from the Tapajos Basin in the Amazon rainforest, have come to Siemens UK’s headquarters in Surrey to demand a meeting with their senior management. Siemens has been a key player in the last four megadams built in the Brazilian Amazon, and is one of just a handful of companies that can supply turbines for large-scale hydroelectric projects.The Munduruku delegation, General Chief Arnaldo Kaba Munduruku and his senior advisor Ademir Kaba Munduruku, have travelled all the way from the Tapajos Valley deep in the heart of the Amazon Rainforest to ask Siemens to publically state that they will not participate in plans to build new dams on their ancestral lands.