Business Day

Illegal gold miners a resurgent threat to indigenous Yanomami in Brazil

• Many dying of malnutriti­on and violence as their lives are disrupted

- Agency Staff Yanomami indigenous land, Brazil /Reuters

Brazil is losing the upper hand in its battle to save the Yanomami indigenous people, who are dying from flu, malaria and malnutriti­on brought into their vast, isolated Amazon rainforest reservatio­n by resurgent illegal miners.

A year after President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva declared a humanitari­an crisis among the Yanomami and vowed zero tolerance for illegal mining, environmen­tal enforcers warn that Brazil is jeopardisi­ng 2023’s hard-won progress, when about 80% of roughly 20,000 wildcatter­s were ousted from the Portugal-sized reservatio­n.

As the Brazilian military has rolled back its support for the government crackdown, the gold-seeking miners have come back, they say, making fresh incursions into Yanomami land.

According to Brazil’s health ministry, 308 Yanomami died of disease, malnutriti­on and violence in 2023, with 50% of the deaths children under four. Deaths from malaria, which is introduced by the miners, doubled in 2023 from 2022.

The presence of armed miners has also scared the Yanomami off planting manioc, their staple along with river fish, and reduced the game they can hunt.

During a Reuters visit to the Yanomami territory in December and January, agents of the environmen­tal protection |agency Ibama said they are now flying solo in the battle against the miners after crucial military support was scaled down.

The Brazilian military reduced operations in mid-2023 and stopped transporti­ng fuel for Ibama’s helicopter­s to forward bases inside the reservatio­n, limiting their range across the giant territory. The air force has not enforced a no-fly zone, despite being ordered to do so by Lula in April, while the navy is not doing enough to blockade rivers that are the miners’ main access for machinery and supplies, three Ibama officials said.

Brazil’s army, navy and air force did not reply to requests for comment.

The ineffectiv­e no-fly zone has led to growing numbers of unregister­ed pilots flying miners into Yanomami land, and then crossing the border to safety in Venezuela when intercepte­d by Ibama helicopter­s, said Ibama pilot Carlos Alberto Hoffmann. Venezuela’s government did not reply to a request for comment.

“The state is not effectivel­y present today in Yanomami territory, and we are seeing the return of illegal mining,” said Hugo Loss, Ibama’s head of enforcemen­t operations. Without more military support, he added, “we will lose all this year’s work.”

A Reuters photograph­er spent a week on Yanomami land, embedding with an elite Ibama unit as members swooped down by helicopter into mining camps to destroy dredging pumps, airplanes and other mining supplies. Miners fled at the sound of the approachin­g helicopter­s, and the armed Ibama officers chased stragglers into the jungle to arrest them.

The photograph­er also visited the Auaris medical station near the Venezuelan border, where naked Yanomami children, their bellies swollen by malnutriti­on, were being nursed back to health.

“Most of the miners had gone, but they are coming back,” Yanomami shaman Davi Kopenawa, whose activism helped create the government-protected Yanomami territory in 1992, said. “Illegal mining is so bad for us.”

Along with poisoning rivers and spreading disease, the return of the gold miners boosts criminal groups that traffic drugs and timber across the Amazon, underminin­g Lula’s pledge to restore law and order there and end deforestat­ion by 2030.

Miners arrested and handcuffed by Ibama special forces said they were poor and needed an income from gold prospectin­g to feed their families. Most were removed from the reservatio­n and freed, and police said they are now seeking the backers who financed the gold digs.

The destructio­n of the rainforest was evident from gaping pits about 5m deep in mining sites cleared of trees, along with dozens of ponds where dredged sludge was pumped into rivers, turning pristine waters a bright orange from the mud.

“This is war because people are dying. Hundreds of Yanomami have died in the humanitari­an crisis, and they are Brazilians too,” said Felipe Finger, head of the Ibama special forces unit.

According to the 2022 census, there are 30,000 people from the Yanomami and related Ye’kwana people on the reservatio­n, including groups with little or no contact with outsiders.

Ibama chief Rodrigo Agostinho said in a statement that the environmen­tal agency will not give up fighting the illegal mining on Yanomami land despite the challenges.

“We are aware of the existing adversitie­s and we recognise the persistent presence of illegal miners in the area,” he said.

Lula held a December 22 cabinet meeting that included commanders of the armed forces, where he emphasised that removing illegal miners was a government priority, according to the head of the indigenous protection agency Funai, Joenia Wapichana.

Last week, Lula’s government pledged 1.2-billion reais ($245m) on security and assistance efforts for the Yanomami, and federal police directorge­neral Andrei Rodrigues said Brazil’s government must throw its full weight into defending the indigenous people.

On Wednesday, the federal police announced the start of a new operation against illegal mining in Yanomami territory and said in a statement it will have the support of the armed forces.

Sydney Possuelo, Brazil’s top expert on isolated indigenous tribes, helped create the Yanomami reservatio­n and expel about 40,000 gold miners in 1992 when he headed Funai. The government must do more, he said in an interview.

“Ibama and the police simply do not have enough personnel there to get rid of the miners. The government is just saying this to show that it is doing something. The air force is not enforcing the no-fly zone. The army and the navy are doing nothing,” he said.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Rounded up: Members of the special inspection group from the Brazilian Institute of Environmen­t and Renewable Natural Resources detain an illegal miner.
/Reuters Rounded up: Members of the special inspection group from the Brazilian Institute of Environmen­t and Renewable Natural Resources detain an illegal miner.
 ?? /Reuters ?? Arrested: An illegal miner is detained by a member of the special inspection group from the Brazilian Institute of Environmen­t and Renewable Natural Resources during an operation against illegal mining in Yanomami indigenous land, Roraima state, Brazil.
/Reuters Arrested: An illegal miner is detained by a member of the special inspection group from the Brazilian Institute of Environmen­t and Renewable Natural Resources during an operation against illegal mining in Yanomami indigenous land, Roraima state, Brazil.
 ?? /Reuters ?? Encircled: An illegal mine surrounds Yanomami huts.
/Reuters Encircled: An illegal mine surrounds Yanomami huts.
 ?? /Reuters ?? On patrol: Felipe Finger (right), head of the special inspection group from the Brazilian Institute of Environmen­t and Renewable Natural Resources, and a colleague use night-vision goggles during an operation.
/Reuters On patrol: Felipe Finger (right), head of the special inspection group from the Brazilian Institute of Environmen­t and Renewable Natural Resources, and a colleague use night-vision goggles during an operation.
 ?? /Reuters ?? Metal lure: Confiscate­d gold is displayed during an operation against illegal mining.
/Reuters Metal lure: Confiscate­d gold is displayed during an operation against illegal mining.

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