Home WebMail
| Calgary -0.2°C
Regions Advertise Login Contact
Action News Action News
  • World
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Africa
    • Americas
  • Canada
  • US
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Breaking
  • Featured
  • Live
  • LIVE
  • Breaking
  • Latest
  • Featured
  • Live
  • LIVE
  • ICE says its agents don’t carry guns in Canada as World Cup approaches
  • Australian and IPL cricket great David Warner charged with drink-driving
  • ‘Iranians reject idea that US will bring stability’
  • How Israel’s invasion of southern Lebanon created a humanitarian crisis
  • ‘Get a grip’: How Iranian embassies mocked Trump’s vulgar threat
  • What’s Iran’s 10-point peace plan that Trump says is ‘not good enough’?
  • Taiwanese opposition leader to meet China’s Xi in a test of diplomatic skill
  • Barcelona vs Atletico Madrid: Champions League – team news, start, lineups
  • Videos capture shooting near Israeli consulate in Istanbul
  • US-Israeli attacks on Iran are ‘clear and obvious war crimes’
  • Can Africa tackle the oil shock from the Iran war?
  • In Ghana Town, a ‘stateless’ future for hundreds born and raised in Gambia
  • Vinicius hails Lamine Yamal for condemning anti-Muslim fan chants
  • Palestine weekly wrap: Protests sweep West Bank after death penalty law
  • ‘Dying of thirst’: Inside Gaza’s al-Mawasi water crisis
  • How US, Israel are waging a war on Iranian culture, education
  • Iranian missile strike damages cars and street in Israel
  • ‘US-Israel playing Russian roulette with security of the region’
  • Ukraine, Russia kill several civilians in tit-for-tat attacks
  • Taiwan’s gender row boxer Lin takes bronze medal at Asian championships
  • Three killed in shooting near Israeli consulate in Turkiye’s Istanbul
  • US-Israeli strikes destroy buildings in northern Iran
  • USA striker Patrick Agyemang ruled out of World Cup due to injury
  • Los Angeles Stadium workers urge FIFA to bar ICE from World Cup
  • ‘Military action is not an effective means to pursue nonproliferation’
  • ICE says its agents don’t carry guns in Canada as World Cup approaches
  • Australian and IPL cricket great David Warner charged with drink-driving
  • ‘Iranians reject idea that US will bring stability’
  • How Israel’s invasion of southern Lebanon created a humanitarian crisis
  • ‘Get a grip’: How Iranian embassies mocked Trump’s vulgar threat
  • What’s Iran’s 10-point peace plan that Trump says is ‘not good enough’?
  • Taiwanese opposition leader to meet China’s Xi in a test of diplomatic skill
  • Barcelona vs Atletico Madrid: Champions League – team news, start, lineups
  • Videos capture shooting near Israeli consulate in Istanbul
  • US-Israeli attacks on Iran are ‘clear and obvious war crimes’
  • Can Africa tackle the oil shock from the Iran war?
  • In Ghana Town, a ‘stateless’ future for hundreds born and raised in Gambia
  • Vinicius hails Lamine Yamal for condemning anti-Muslim fan chants
  • Palestine weekly wrap: Protests sweep West Bank after death penalty law
  • ‘Dying of thirst’: Inside Gaza’s al-Mawasi water crisis
  • How US, Israel are waging a war on Iranian culture, education
  • Iranian missile strike damages cars and street in Israel
  • ‘US-Israel playing Russian roulette with security of the region’
  • Ukraine, Russia kill several civilians in tit-for-tat attacks
  • Taiwan’s gender row boxer Lin takes bronze medal at Asian championships
  • Three killed in shooting near Israeli consulate in Turkiye’s Istanbul
  • US-Israeli strikes destroy buildings in northern Iran
  • USA striker Patrick Agyemang ruled out of World Cup due to injury
  • Los Angeles Stadium workers urge FIFA to bar ICE from World Cup
  • ‘Military action is not an effective means to pursue nonproliferation’
In Pictures: ‘People of the Water’ try to survive loss of lake

In Pictures: ‘People of the Water’ try to survive loss of lake

Lake Poopo dried up in 2015 - it used to sustain the livelihoods and culture of the Indigenous community around it.

By Al Jazeera Published 2021-06-10 11:16 Updated 2021-06-10 11:16 3 min read Source: Al Jazeera
Explained Human Rights Science & Technology Climate Crisis

For many generations, the homeland of the Uru people here was not land at all: it was the brackish waters of Lake Poopo.

The Uru — “people of the water” — would build a sort of family island of reeds when they married and would survive on what they could harvest from the broad, shallow lake in the highlands of southwestern Bolivia.

“They collected eggs, fished, hunted flamingos and birds. When they fell in love, the couple built their own raft,” said Abdón Choque, leader of Punaca, a town of some 180 people.

Now what was Bolivia’s second-largest lake is gone. It dried up about five years ago, a victim of shrinking glaciers, water diversions for farming and contamination. Ponds reappear in places during the rainy season. The body of the lake, 3,700 metres (12,139 feet) above sea level used to cover an area of 1,000 square kilometres (390 square miles) and at its highest level in 1986, had an area of 3,500sq km (1,351sq miles).

The Uru of Lake Poopo are left clinging to its salt-crusted former shoreline in three small settlements, 635 people scrabbling for ways to make a living and struggling to save even their culture.

“Our grandfathers thought the lake would last all their lives, and now my people are near extinction because our source of life has been lost,” said Luis Valero, leader of the Uru communities around the lake.

Not long before the lake was lost, the language of the Uru-Cholo had perished as well. The last native speakers gradually died and younger generations grew up schooled in Spanish and working in other, more common Indigenous languages, Aymara and Quechua.

To save their identities, the communities are trying to revive their native language — or at least its closest sibling. Aided by the government and a local foundation, they have invited teachers from a related branch of the Uru, the Uru-Chipaya near the Chilean border to the west, to teach that tongue — one of 36 officially recognised Bolivian languages — to their children.

“In this times, everything changes. But we are making efforts to maintain our culture,” Valero said. “Our children have to recover the language to distinguish us from our neighbours.”

“The instructors teach us the language with numbers, songs and greetings,” said Avelina Choque, a 21-year-old student who said she one day would like to teach mathematics. “It’s a little difficult to pronounce.”

The pandemic has added to that struggle. The teachers have been unable to hold in-person classes during the pandemic, leaving students to learn from texts, videos and radio programmes.

Punaca Mayor Rufino Choque said the Uru began settling on the lakeshore several decades ago as the lake began to shrink, though by then, most of the lands around them had been occupied.

“We are ancient [as a people], but we have no territory. Now we have no source of work, nothing,” said the 61-year-old mayor, whose town consists of a ribbon of round, plastered block homes along an earthen street.

With no land for farming, the young men hire themselves out as labourers, herders or miners in nearby towns or more distant cities. “They see the money and they don’t return,” said Abdón. Some of the women make handicrafts of straw.

The broader Uru people once dominated a large swath of the region, and branches remain around Peru and Lake Titicaca to the north, around the Chilean border and near the Argentinian border.

Share this page

  • 𝕏 X/Twitter
  • 🔗 LinkedIn
  • 📘 Facebook
  • 💬 WhatsApp
  • ✉️ Email
Action News logo

Action News

A division of WestNet Continental Broadcasting

About

Part of WestNet N.A.

Action.News

Network

  • WestNet News
  • Advertise With Us
  • RSS Feed
  • Atom Feed

Legal

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Action News Code of Ethics
  • Editorial Policies
  • Corrections Policy

Connect

  • Facebook.com/ActionNews
  • YouTube
  • Twitch
  • WhatsApp
  • Submit a News Tip
  • Contact the Newsroom

© 2026 WestNet-HD, A Division of WN Continental Broadcasting. All Rights Reserved.

Action News™ and WestNet News are registered trademarks of WN Continental Broadcasting in the United States and Canada. Other names may be trademarks of their respective owners.

Home Breaking Canada Sports Search
🔴 LIVE
Action News Live ✖
🔊 Click to unmute