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El Encanto

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El Encanto is a town and municipality in the Amazonas Department of Colombia . It is located in the mouth of the Cara Paraná River , a tributary of the Putumayo River ( Içá ). El Encanto can be reached by air or river. The local navy base has a runway available only to military and official planes, established during the Colombia-Peru War . By river the closest towns with airport access are Puerto Arturo, Peru from downstream, and Puerto Leguízamo ( Putumayo Department , Colombia) upstream.

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4-466: The majority of the inhabitants in the area are Huitotos indigenous tribes. The municipality has an area of 10,724 square kilometres or 4,141 square miles. In 2005, it had a population of 4,376 people. El Encanto was founded shortly before the 1900s by rubber tappers looking to take advantage of the local natives as a work force. The rubber boom had drastic effects in the Putumayo region, where El Encanto

8-624: Is located. The land owned by Arana was split into two 'departments': La Chorrera on the Igaraparaná and El Encanto, headquarters for sections on the Caraparaná. By 1904, the settlement came under the control of Julio César Arana and what would become the Peruvian Amazon Company . The companies efforts to extract rubber and profit culminated in the Putumayo genocide : enslaving, abusing, starving, exhausting, and murdering local populations. At

12-538: The three of them could retain their work force. At least 6,719 indigenous people were moved from the region: and 50% of them died from disease. El Encanto has a tropical rainforest climate ( Köppen Af ) with heavy rainfall year-round. (in Spanish) El Encanto official website This Department of Amazonas location article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Witotoan languages Too Many Requests If you report this error to

16-591: The time of Roger Casement's visit to the Putumayo, the station was under the control of Miguel S. Loayza . Before the border of the Putumayo was changed thanks to the Salomón–Lozano Treaty : Julio Cesar Arana, Miguel S. Loayza, and Carlos Loayza initiated a series of forced migrations. Between 1922 and 1930 groups of natives from the right bank of the Putumayo were resettled in the Ampiyacu basin of Loreto, Peru: so

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