The Post

Brazilians toil for gold in illegal Amazon mines

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Informal mining in Brazil is seen by many as a scourge polluting the Amazon rainforest, poisoning indigenous tribes and robbing the nation of its wealth.

For others it is a way of life. Brazilian garimpos, or wildcat mines, are operated by small crews of men, often caked in redbrown mud and working with rudimentar­y pans, shovels and sluice boxes that have been used for centuries.

More sophistica­ted operations use water cannons and boats sucking mud from the bottoms of rivers. Regardless of the method, searching for gold and other minerals like cassiterit­e and niobium is dirty, dangerous and often illegal.

‘‘Looking for gold is like playing in a casino,’’ said a 48-year-old miner.

Miners asked not to be named, saying they feared the police as much of their work is illegal.

He started in the wildcat mines as a teenager in the area around Crepurizao - a ramshackle frontier town of 5000 with a dirt landing strip that is a gateway for informal mining in the region.

Garimpos are in the spotlight as Brazil debates opening an area known as Renca in the northern Amazon forest to mining, which has met with stiff resistance from environmen­talists.

Mines and Energy Minister Fernando Coelho Filho argues that licensed mining will be an improvemen­t over the estimated 1000 people currently mining in the reserve illegally.

Crepurizao lies hundreds of kilometres south of Renca, but gives a window into life in the garimpos caught up in the debate.

Living in makeshift homes of wood and plastic, miners in the area ship some 60kg of gold per month, according to traders.

That much pure gold is worth millions of dollars on the global market, but high costs and layers of traders in the local market leave most miners living on the brink of poverty.

Basic staples can cost four or five times the price in the nearest city, an eight-hour bus ride away.

Fuel stations, a general store, a bar, an evangelica­l church and prostitute­s vie for the income and attention of the miners, known as garimpeiro­s, when they aren’t working or lazing in hammocks.

There are 2113 licensed garimpo sites in Brazil, according to ministry data, but environmen­tal experts and two government officials, who asked not to be named, said far more small-scale

BRAZIL:

mines skip the licensing ignore regulation­s altogether.

In Crepurizao, where mines often cluster close together, it was unclear which operations were licensed.

The total area worked by garimpeiro­s in Brazil is thought to be small. But chemicals like mer- and cury, which miners in Crepurizao dump to separate gold from grit, can leave a large footprint of contaminat­ion.

In March last year, a government-backed study of indigenous villages in the northern state of Roraima revealed alarming levels of mercury.

One group of villagers had more than double the level of mercury considered to be a serious health risk - such as damage to the central nervous system, kidneys, heart and reproducti­ve process - detected in their hair.

The Mining and Energy Ministry said a new oversight agency created in a decree by President Michel Temer, now pending congressio­nal approval, would allow more effective government coordinati­on and inspection­s to restrict illegal mining. Congressma­n Leonardo Quintao said it will be able to raise more funding for oversight.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? A wildcat gold miner, or garimpeiro, works at a mine, also known as garimpo, at a deforested area of Amazon rainforest near Crepurizao, in the municipali­ty of Itaituba, Para State, Brazil.
PHOTO: REUTERS A wildcat gold miner, or garimpeiro, works at a mine, also known as garimpo, at a deforested area of Amazon rainforest near Crepurizao, in the municipali­ty of Itaituba, Para State, Brazil.
 ??  ?? A wildcat gold miner makes the most of his time off at a village bar near Crepurizao.
A wildcat gold miner makes the most of his time off at a village bar near Crepurizao.
 ??  ?? Wildcat gold miners rub mercury that has coagulated into tiny particles of gold in a basin.
Wildcat gold miners rub mercury that has coagulated into tiny particles of gold in a basin.

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