Stabroek News

Brazil backs ‘Guardians of the Amazon’ in their war on loggers

-

RIO DE JANEIRO, (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - In a rare move, Brazil is providing armed backup to Indians protecting the world’s most threatened tribe from illegal loggers, a decision that campaigner­s lauded as a “landmark” in efforts to halt deforestat­ion in the Amazon.

Officials moved in to the Brazilian rainforest after a group of from indigenous Guajajara tribe, who call themselves The Guardians of the Amazon, seized a logging gang and burned their truck, rights group Survival Internatio­nal said.

“Over the weekend, a team of Ibama (Brazil’s environmen­tal protection agency) and environmen­tal military police arrived in response to The Guardians’ call for help,” said Sarah Shenker, a senior campaigner with the rights group Survival Internatio­nal.

“That was a landmark moment, I would say, because The Guardians hardly ever receive support,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by phone.

South America’s largest country is grappling with scores of deadly land conflicts, illustrati­ng the tensions between preserving indigenous culture and economic developmen­t.

The Arariboia area in northeast Brazil is home to the Awa Indians, several hundred hunter-gatherers described by Survival Internatio­nal as the most threatened tribe in the world because they have nowhere to retreat to if their forest is cut down.

The government has struggled to protect the vast territory amid budget cuts and increasing political pressure to opening up indigenous reserves to mining, Survival Internatio­nal said.

A spokesman at Ibama declined to comment on the ongoing operation. The indigenous affairs agency, Funai, did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

Brazil’s uncontacte­d tribes, some of the last on earth, depend on large areas of unspoiled forest land to hunt animals and gather the food they need to survive.

They are particular­ly vulnerable when their land rights are threatened because they lack the natural immunity to diseases that are carried by outsiders.

The joint patrol is moving into another area where The Guardians found a second loggers’ camp, Shenker said. Three Guardians were killed by loggers in 2016 and they often face death threats and arson attacks, she said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana