Stabroek News

Brazil ups military presence in Amazon, cites Essequibo tensions, Yanomami needs

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BRASILIA, (Reuters) – Border tensions over Guyana’s Essequibo and the humanitari­an crisis among the Yanomami Indigenous people have led Brazil’s army to increase its forces in the Amazon by 10% ahead of plan, the military commander for the region told Reuters.

The additional 2,000 troops will help the army patrol a 9,000 km border with Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia in a jungle region used by drug trafficker­s and illegal miners, loggers and smugglers, General Ricardo Costa Neves said.

“They will reinforce our operations in this vast area to help combat border and environmen­tal crimes,” the four-star infantry general said in a rare media interview.

The dispute arising from Venezuela’s claim over Guyana’s oil-rich Essequibo region has already led the Brazilian army to send more soldiers, armoured cars and artillery to the border state of Roraima with the creation of a new regiment there.

“The border situation made us bring forward some changes that were in our strategic plan. We are practicall­y tripling our mechanized infantry, armoured vehicles and artillery in Roraima,” Costa Neves said.

The reinforcem­ent will include the creation of two permanentl­y deployed forward bases inside the Yanomami reservatio­n on the Uraricoera and Mucajai rivers, major access routes for wildcat gold miners that have invaded the territory.

The miners brought disease, destructio­n of the rainforest and armed violence to the isolated Yanomami lands bordering

Venezuela, causing malnutriti­on and deaths. Brazil’s government last year declared a humanitari­an emergency and sent a task force to remove an estimated 20,000 miners.

But gold miners began to return after the armed forces scaled back their operations and failed to enforce a no-fly zone for planes flying them to clandestin­e jungle airstrips, environmen­tal enforcemen­t agents told Reuters.

Costa Neves said the army will have a permanent presence at two new bases providing logistical support to environmen­tal, Indigenous and health agencies, beside repressing illegal activities within a 150kms zone from the border.

The general, who commanded the U.N. peacekeepi­ng mission in the Democratic Republic of Congo (Monusco) in 20202021, rejected criticism of the military’s failure to secure the Yanomami territory last year.

“We airlifted 600 tonnes of food and supplies that were dropped by parachute to Indigenous communitie­s. It was the largest airlift operation in the Brazilian Air Force’s history,” he said.

With the support of the military, 80% of the miners were evicted, some 80 dredging barges were blown up and 22 planes seized or destroyed, Costa Neves said.

The armed forces on their own distribute­d 36,000 food parcels, medivacked 206 patients out of 6,000 Yanomami attended and arrested 165 suspects for environmen­tal crimes, he said.

 ?? ?? General Ricardo Costa Neves http:// www.legiaodain­fantaria.eb.mil.br/
General Ricardo Costa Neves http:// www.legiaodain­fantaria.eb.mil.br/

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