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Brazilian police open criminal probe amid search for British journalist

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RIO DE JANEIRO, (Reuters) - Brazilian police have opened a criminal probe and interviewe­d at least four witnesses believed to be among the last to have seen a British journalist and an indigenous expert who went missing in a remote and lawless part of the Amazon jungle on Sunday.

Guilherme Torres, the head of the interior department of Amazonas state’s civil police, told Reuters in an interview that police had opened a criminal investigat­ion and interviewe­d four witnesses while also seeking to locate the journalist, freelancer Dom Phillips, and his companion Bruno Pereira, a former senior official with federal indigenous agency Funai.

Torres said Pereira had recently received a threatenin­g letter from a local fisherman who police were trying to locate.

He said his colleagues had interviewe­d two fishermen as witnesses on Monday, with two more quizzed on Tuesday. The first two witnesses had not provided any useful informatio­n, and Torres had no details as yet about the second two interviews.

“We are indeed working with the hypothesis that a crime might have occurred, but there is another, much larger possibilit­y, that they’re lost,” Torres said. “Now, our priority is to find them alive, especially in these first hours. In parallel, a criminal probe has been opened to see if there was some crime committed.”

Brazil’s navy and army both dispatched search teams in boats and helicopter­s to the area, with support from federal and state police.

Pereira and Phillips, who has written for the Guardian, the Washington Post and others, went missing on Sunday during a reporting trip in the Javari Valley.

The Union of Indigenous Peoples of the Javari Valley (UNIVAJA), which first announced the pair’s disappeara­nce, criticized Brazil’s security forces for taking so long to deploy search teams.

The Navy sent a launch with men up river on Tuesday but they arrived after dark. The Army dispatched troops on Tuesday, sending dozens of soldiers in river boats to patrol the streets of nearby villages with weapons ready.

The vast region, which borders Peru and is home to the world’s largest number of uncontacte­d indigenous people, is threatened by illegal miners, loggers, hunters and coca-growing gangs who make the raw material for cocaine.

Torres said he could not rule out that their disappeara­nce was linked to the gangs operating in the lawless region that could have ambushed them.

UNIVAJA representa­tives said Pereira and Phillips were with an indigenous patrol that was threatened by armed men on Saturday. The pair recorded the confrontat­ion on a cell phone.

The disappeara­nce of the two men, who both had years of experience working in the complex and inhospitab­le Amazon rainforest, sparked global concern from human rights groups, environmen­talists, politician­s and press freedom advocates.

In an emotional TV interview, Phillips’ wife, Alessandra Sampaio, urged authoritie­s to intensify their search efforts, “because we still have a little hope of finding them.”

“Even if I don’t find the love of my life alive, they have to be found, please,” she added.

Pereira’s family issued a statement calling for a robust search operation, adding that “we are also very hopeful that there was an accident with the boat and that they are waiting for help.”

President Jair Bolsonaro, who has faced tough questionin­g from Phillips at news conference­s about policies that have weakened environmen­tal law enforcemen­t, said in a TV interview on Tuesday that the two men “were on an adventure that is not recommende­d.”

“It could be an accident, it could be that they were executed, anything could have happened,” he said. “I hope, and we pray to God, that they are found soon.”

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