Los Angeles Times

‘Amazon Caribbean’ natives say land grabbers are more brazen

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

ALTER DO CHAO, Brazil — Brazil’s Alter do Chao, a sleepy village that blends rainforest and beaches, bet on tourism and scored big. Visitors flocked here to eat Amazonian river fish while gazing out over the water, and to take day trips offering the chance to meet Indigenous people and see pink dolphins.

But this once-pristine place is discoverin­g that the perils of becoming a can’tmiss destinatio­n extend beyond hordes of weekend warriors sapping its unspoiled charm. Problems rife throughout the Amazon region — land grabbing, illegal deforestat­ion and unsanction­ed constructi­on — are plaguing this ecotourism hot spot.

By 2018, land grabbing had grown so pervasive that one of Brazil’s environmen­tal protection agencies said Alter do Chao needed “urgent interventi­ons against the rise of invaders” so it could preserve 67% of its protected areas.

One month later, President Jair Bolsonaro, who has pledged to promote developmen­t of the Amazon, was inaugurate­d. Alter do Chao’s struggle with land grabbers has only worsened since, residents and activists say, with lawbreaker­s more brazen about occupying land, then slashing and burning forest to make way for houses and fields.

Meanwhile, dozens of projects in this riverside village known as the “Amazon Caribbean” have advanced despite being built within protected areas or lacking proper permits.

Most newcomers say they want to buy land legally and cheaply, said Ederson Santos, a motorboat driver. Failing that, many are happy to fence off any unoccupied area and claim it as theirs.

Santos, 47, brought the Associated Press to a recent developmen­t near the socalled Enchanted Forest, where a massive pier now links to an expansive home beside a stream. Land grabbers like this have seized many of the 17 nearby waterways, he said.

“The family that lives there never asked permission for any of this,” he said. “The house, the constructi­on, nothing. Everyone knows.”

The residents weren’t home the day the AP visited, and Santos said he didn’t know the owner’s name.

Land grabbing consists of invading public areas and getting documents, forged or not, to certify their possession. Brazil doesn’t have a registry consolidat­ing all municipal, state and federal records for landowners, making it easier for criminals.

Historical­ly, Brazil has done little to stop land grabbing in the vast Amazon. But Alter do Chao should be easier to monitor; it has a total protected area of only 66 square miles and has several nonprofit organizati­ons dedicated to its defense.

City Hall in the municipali­ty of Santarem, which runs the village, said in a statement that its agents were constantly conducting preemptive raids to stop land grabbing, but provided no details. Residents said local environmen­t enforcemen­t agents were hardworkin­g but few.

Rilson Maduro, owner of a restaurant dishing up Amazon cuisine like the tucunare fish, says developmen­t is also erasing the area’s origins. Ceramics and bones from his ancestors, of the Borari Indigenous group, have been found there over the years.

“Some land grabbers went there because they like the view, others because it is good for agricultur­e,” he said. “We want to keep it intact because of our history.”

A seven-story tower under constructi­on near the waterfront will be Alter’s tallest building when it is completed; projects like it will house a growing population of tourists and residents.

The village of some 7,000 people attracts about 100,000 tourists during high season. A picture-perfect spit of sand jutting across the water in front of its central plaza — known as Love Island — is the biggest draw for selfie-snapping visitors. And it’s easily accessible, just 20 miles from Santarem’s airport.

These days, Alter do Chao more closely resembles the idyll of the pre-tourist boom era, when it still felt untapped. The coronaviru­s has dried up much of its tourism, though its central square still features stalls serving regional dishes.

João Romano moved here in 2017 from Sao Paulo, Brazil’s biggest metropolis, in search of a slower-paced life. He and his wife watched monkeys swing past their wooden home, and their daughters picked fruit dangling from trees. He became a volunteer firefighte­r for an environmen­tal group and believed he’d found peace.

But fighting fires put him in developers’ crosshairs. His world was turned upside down late last year when local police accused him and three fellow firefighte­rs of setting a protected forest area ablaze. Intense media coverage followed: They were jailed for three days and, upon release, threatened by those who accused them of being radical environmen­talists who set the fire to sully Bolsonaro’s reputation and undermine his plans to develop the Amazon.

“There is a big pressure here for what they believe developmen­t is. They don’t see potential for sustainabl­e growth,” said Romano, 28.

Bolsonaro trumpeted the police allegation­s, claiming that nonprofits were responsibl­e for deploying arsonist firefighte­rs, funded by actor Leonardo DiCaprio.

But a recording of Santarem Mayor Nelio Aguiar revealed that he told Para state Gov. Helder Barbalho that police were behind the fire. Police denied the allegation and continued to blame firefighte­rs.

Last month, federal police exonerated the firefighte­rs of any involvemen­t. The findings of their investigat­ion were sent to the Para state prosecutor­s’ office, which has yet to announce whether it will drop the case.

“The Alter I once knew is changed, and I don’t like many of those changes,” said fisherman Alfredo José Branco, 71, whose family is among the last of a group that has lived for decades near the beach.

“I will stay, but I wonder if my children and grandchild­ren will be able to,” he said. “Everywhere I go has invaders now.”

 ?? Andre Penner Associated Press ?? RESIDENTS OF Alter do Chao, a sleepy village and ecotourist hot spot, say land seizures have only worsened since Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro took office.
Andre Penner Associated Press RESIDENTS OF Alter do Chao, a sleepy village and ecotourist hot spot, say land seizures have only worsened since Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro took office.

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