Antelope Valley Press

Family, friends mourn journalist killed in Brazil

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NITEROI, Brazil (AP) — Gathered at a cemetery on the outskirts of Rio de Janeiro, friends and relatives paid their final respects, on Sunday, to British journalist Dom Phillips, killed in the Brazilian Amazon while researchin­g for a book about how to save the world’s largest rainforest.

“First of all, I would like to express my eternal gratitude to the Indigenous peoples, who are with us as loyal guardians of life, justice, and our forests,” Phillips’ wife, Alessandra Sampaio, said at the cemetery entrance. “Today, Dom will be cremated in Brazil, the country he loved, his chosen home. Today is a day of mourning.”

Phillips, 57, and Indigenous expert Bruno Pereira, 41, were killed, on June 5, on their boat on the Itaquai river, near the entrance of the Javari Valley Indigenous Territory, which borders Peru and Colombia. Three fishermen from nearby riverine communitie­s were arrested. Two of them confessed to the murders, according to the police.

The region holds a long conflict between and Indigenous tribes and poor fishermen hired to invade the Javari Valley to catch arapaima, turtles and game. Pereira, who was an official of Brazil’s Indigenous affairs bureau, fought these invasions for years and had received multiple threats for his work.

“He was killed because he tried to tell the world what was happening to the rainforest and its inhabitant­s,” said Phillips’ sister, Sian. “Dom understood the need for urgent change for political and economic approaches to conservati­on. His family and his friends are committed to continuing that work even in this time of tragedy. The story must be told.”

Phillips wrote about Brazil for 15 years, first covering the oil industry for Platts, later freelancin­g for The Washington Post and The New York Times and then regularly contributi­ng to The Guardian. He was versatile, but gravitated toward features about the environmen­t as it became his passion.

After living in Rio for several years, the couple had moved to the northeaste­rn city of Salvador, closer to Sampaio’s family, where Phillips taught English to students from poor communitie­s. They were also in the process of adopting two children.

 ?? SILVIA IZQUIERDO/AP PHOTO ?? Alessandra Sampaio (right) is comforted during the funeral of her husband British journalist Dom Phillips at the Parque da Colina cemetery in Niteroi, Brazil.
SILVIA IZQUIERDO/AP PHOTO Alessandra Sampaio (right) is comforted during the funeral of her husband British journalist Dom Phillips at the Parque da Colina cemetery in Niteroi, Brazil.

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