The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Deaths jump in Brazil’s Indigenous tribes

- ANTHONY BOADLE STEPHEN EISENHAMME­R

BRASILIA — Coronaviru­s is spreading fast through Brazil’s indigenous population­s, with deaths caused by the disease increasing more than five-fold in the past month, according to data collected by a national associatio­n of first peoples.

Many epidemiolo­gists had hoped remote locations might protect the tribes, but the virus, which first took hold in Brazil’s cosmopolit­an state capitals of Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, is increasing­ly devastatin­g these far-flung communitie­s where basic healthcare is often precarious.

For many indigenous it harks back to a dark past.

When Europeans first navigated the rivers of the Amazon rainforest, their smallpox decimated local tribes. Later, rubber tappers, gold miners and settlers brought malaria, measles and influenza. Now, it is COVID-19.

Deaths among Brazil’s indigenous population­s rose to 182 by June 1, from 28 at the end of April, according to the Articulati­on of Brazil’s Indigenous Peoples (APIB) — a national umbrella associatio­n that brings together the country’s 305 tribes.

In the village of Sororó in southeaste­rn Pará, tribesman Itamaré Surui said people were falling ill but the government had not provided tests to confirm whether they have COVID-19.

“I am feeling dizzy with fever and stomach pains. Many are ill in the village and we have no help,” he said.

The official figures provided by Brazil’s government put the number of dead at 59, as they only classify indigenous deaths as those occurring among tribes living on reservatio­ns but not those who have migrated to cities.

Brazil’s Health Ministry, which collates the data and provides medical assistance to indigenous tribes, did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

The numbers may be small compared to the rest of Brazil, which now has the second largest outbreak in the world, but they are significan­t because they show the virus has taken hold in vulnerable communitie­s where doctors fear the spread will prove devastatin­g.

Erik Jennings, a doctor working with indigenous population­s, said the death toll provided a snapshot of what was happening weeks ago, due to an underrepor­ting of cases and the time it often takes for a patient to pass away. “Today’s reality is much worse,” he said, adding that a severe lack of testing made it hard to know exactly how bad the situation was.

On Tuesday, the Pan American Health Organizati­on said it was very concerned about the rate of contagion among indigenous population­s in the Amazon.

Douglas Rodrigues, another doctor, who has worked with indigenous tribes for 30 years, said he feared for the tribes in the rainforest state of Amazonas, where the only public hospitals equipped with ventilator­s are located in Manaus, the capital, and already are at full capacity. “In Amazonas, the disease is a death sentence,” he said.

Brazil’s first indigenous reservatio­n, the Xingu Park where 16 tribes live and Rodrigues is based, blocked access to outsiders and has so far had no cases of COVID19. “But the danger is great because contaminat­ion is close by,” he said.

The only intensive care units in the vast state of Amazonas are also located in Manaus, where a wing for indigenous COVID-19 patients was opened last week.

But even there access for indigenous people is complicate­d. On Wednesday, indigenous women protested outside the hospital because tribal shamans were not being allowed in and they could not bring herbal medicines to a relative with COVID-19.

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