The Jerusalem Post

Brazil beefs up its army presence in the Amazon

- • By ANTHONY BOADLE and RICARDO BRITO

BRASILIA (Reuters) – Border tensions over Guyana’s Esequibo 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 Esequibo region has already led the Brazilian army to send more soldiers, armored 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, armored 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 rainforset 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 150-kms zone from the border.

The general, who commanded the UN peacekeepi­ng mission in the Democratic Republic of Congo (Monusco) in 2020-2021, rejected criticism of the military’s failure to secure the Yanomami territory last year.

“We airlifted 600 tons 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.

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