Bangkok Post

Amazon chief Raoni admitted to hospital

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BRASILIA: Indigenous leader Raoni Metuktire, one of the Amazon rainforest’s best-known defenders, was transferre­d between hospitals on Saturday due to weakness and a “worsening” state of health, one of the medical facilities said.

Mr Raoni, chief of the Kayapo people in northern Brazil, was likely suffering from a digestive hemorrhage, said Santa Ines Hospital, in the small town of Colider in Mato Grosso state, where he was admitted on Thursday.

Mr Raoni was already showing “signs of improvemen­t” including a rise in blood pressure after being administer­ed first aid, according to Dois Pinheiros Hospital in the city of Sinop, where he was transferre­d.

The hospital said it would conduct exams beginning yesterday to detect whether Mr Raoni might be suffering from a gastric ulcer, estimating that he would remain at the facility “at least three days”.

The transfer was made by plane after Mr Raoni, now in his 90s, appeared to be in a “worsening condition, with an increase in weakening and a deteriorat­ion of renal function”, Santa Ines Hospital reported in a statement.

It said that since it “did not have an intensive care unit, he was transferre­d with some urgency” just in case “his clinical condition worsens.”

Known for his colourful feather headdresse­s and the large disc inserted in his lower lip, Mr Raoni has travelled the world raising awareness of the threat posed by destructio­n of the Amazon.

The president of French NGO Planete Amazon reported that Mr Raoni had been in a depressed state following the loss of his wife of more than 60 years, Bekwyjka, who died in June following a stroke.

He “started to be sick 15 days ago with fever, diarrhoea and vomiting” and was very dehydrated, said Gert-Peter Bruch, the associatio­n’s leader.

Mr Raoni tested negative for coronaviru­s, Mr Bruch said, even as many indigenous people in the Amazon have contracted the illness as it sweeps across the country.

Brazil, the world’s second hardest-hit country, is nearing 80,000 deaths from the coronaviru­s.

Another iconic indigenous leader in Brazil, chief Paulinho Paiakan, died in June after contractin­g the virus.

The same month, Mr Raoni said Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro “wants to take advantage of this disease” to eliminate indigenous people.

Mr Bolsonaro has faced criticism for pushing to open protected Amazon lands to farming and mining, which he argues would benefit indigenous communitie­s.

Indigenous leaders and activists are sceptical, however, and have condemned the president for some of his comments, including that indigenous people “are becoming more and more human, just like us”.

 ?? AFP ?? Indigenous leader Raoni Metuktire addresses members from different Brazilian tribes in Piaracu village, Brazil, in January.
AFP Indigenous leader Raoni Metuktire addresses members from different Brazilian tribes in Piaracu village, Brazil, in January.

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