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Miner Vale drops prospects rights on indigenous lands in Brazil

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RIO DE JANEIRO, Sept 22 (Reuters) - Brazilian miner Vale SA has given up all rights to mining prospects on indigenous lands in Brazil, recognizin­g that they require the consent of the communitie­s and legislatio­n regulating such activity, the company said on Wednesday.

Vale said in a statement that since last year it has returned to the National Mining Agency 89 licences for mineral research and mining activities in lands that interfere with indigenous reservatio­ns.

In the coming days, the company will file withdrawal­s and waivers for 15 remaining mining prospects that overlap with part of the Xikrin do Cateté reservatio­n in Para, the northern state where Vale, one of the largest global producers of iron ore, extracts much of its mineral.

Vale said prior consent was fundamenta­l for the self-determinat­ion of indigenous people and the protection of their cultures and ways of life.

The company's decision came as Brazil's Supreme Court debates the constituti­onal validity of a cut-off date for indigenous land claims, which the government of President Jair Bolsonaro and farm sector have promoted in order to give farmers legal certainty in land disputes in the agricultur­al powerhouse.

Land not occupied by indigenous communitie­s when Brazil passed its 1988 constituti­on has not been recognized as reservatio­n land since 2016, based on a principle that the court has considered unconstitu­tional.

Indigenous people say land guarantees are vital for their survival and accuse Bolsonaro's right-wing government of trampling on their rights to allow commercial mining and agricultur­e on tribal lands in the Amazon and other parts of Brazil.

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