The Borneo Post

New gold rush fuels Amazon destructio­n

- Joshua Howat Berger, with Valeria Pacheco in Brasilia

SAO FELIX DO XINGU, Brazil: Standing over the gaping pit in the middle of his small farm, Brazilian wildcat miner Antonio Silva struggles to explain why he joined the new gold rush sweeping the Amazon.

The 61-year-old grandfathe­r of six had planned to retire from illegal mining, and the environmen­tal destructio­n that comes along with it.

He bought this farm in rural Sao Felix do Xingu, in the southeaste­rn Amazon, and was starting a ca le ranch on a longdefore­sted patch of jungle where he would not have to cut down more trees.

But then the pandemic hit, gold prices soared, and Silva — a pseudonym, as the man is involved in illicit activity — couldn’t resist the temptation of easy money.

He put his retirement plans on hold and spent 50,000 reais (US$9,000) of his meager savings to rent an excavator, hire four workers, and dig a hole the size of a large house that now dominates his emerald pastures.

Filled with murky gray-green water, the hole is outfi ed with a pump si ing on a ramshackle ra that delivers muddy sediment to a sluice to be panned for gold. To his chagrin, he has found only trace amounts so far.

“I know it’s wrong. I know the problems mining causes. But I don’t have anything else,” says Silva, who got his start mining in the gold rush of the 1970s and 80s at the infamous Serra Pelada mine, known for images of tens of thousands of mud-soaked men swarming its cavernous sides like ants, hauling sacks of dirt from its bowels.

Now, illegal mining is surging again in the mineral-rich Amazon basin, fuelled by poverty, greed, impunity and record gold prices.

As investors have sought a haven from pandemic-induced economic chaos in gold, illegal miners have responded by hacking giant rust-coloured scars into the plush green of the world’s biggest rainforest.

Mining has already destroyed a record 114 square kilometres of the Brazilian Amazon this year — more than 10,000 football pitches.

Silva’s operation is relatively tiny, and the land he’s damaging is his own.

But much of the destructio­n is on protected indigenous reservatio­ns.

There, gangs with heavy equipment and brutal tactics are installing huge mines, a acking villages, spreading disease, poisoning the water — and devastatin­g the very communitie­s experts say are key to saving the Amazon.

We have to make sure our children have a river to fish in, land to live on. That’s why I keep fighting.

Maria Leusa Munduruku

‘You’ll have to kill me’

The Brazilian Amazon has 1.2 million square kilometres of indigenous reservatio­ns. Most of it is pristine forest, thanks to native traditions of living in harmony with nature.

Mineral-rich and remote, many reservatio­ns are also easy prey for illegal mining gangs. Their camps o en are a breeding ground for other crimes, prosecutor­s say, including the drugs trade, sex traffickin­g and slave labour.

The government estimates there are 4,000 illegal miners operating on indigenous territory in the Amazon, though activists say the figure is much higher.

Recent studies found they used 100 tonnes of mercury in 20192020 to separate gold dust from soil — and that up to 80 per cent of children in nearby villages show signs of neurologic­al damage from exposure to it.

Mercury also poisons the

fish that many indigenous communitie­s rely on for food.

Native peoples facing this nightmare have begun organising anti-mining patrols and protests — sometimes paying a heavy

price.

Maria Leusa Munduruku is a leader of the Munduruku people, whose territory has been among the hardest hit.

When illegal miners started buying off community members with cash, alcohol and drugs in a bid to move in on tribal land, Munduruku, 34, organised local women to resist.

Soon, she was ge ing death threats, she says.

On May 26, armed men swarmed her home.

“They poured gasoline on my house, then set it on fire,” she says, red flowers crowning her black hair, her baby nursing at her breast.

“I said I wasn’t leaving, that they would have to kill me. Somehow, my house survived. God only knows why it didn’t catch fire. They burned everything inside it.”

Munduruku, who has five children and a grandson, did not back down.

In September, she travelled to Brasilia, some 2,500 kilometres from her village, to help lead a protest of indigenous women demanding the government protect their land.

That rally came in the wake of another major indigenous demonstrat­ion in the capital a month earlier, also over land rights issues.

“We have to make sure our children have a river to fish in, land to live on,” she says.

“That’s why I keep fighting.”

Backed by Bolsonaro

Brazil mined 107 tonnes of gold last year, making it the world’s seventh-biggest producer.

Illegal mines have exploded under far-right President Jair Bolsonaro, who has pushed to open indigenous reservatio­ns to mining since taking office in 2019.

A recent study found just onethird of Brazil’s gold production is certified as legally mined.

Current regulation­s allow sellers to vouch for the origin of their gold by simply signing a paper.

The Amazon region is notoriousl­y hard to police.

“We realised using only on-theground police operations was an exercise in futility,” says Helena Palmquist, spokeswoma­n for the federal prosecutor­s’ office in the northern state of Para. Miners would flee into the jungle when police arrived, she says. Authoritie­s burned the machinery le behind. But in a sign of how well-financed the gangs are, they easily replaced the excavators, which cost 600,000 reais apiece.

So prosecutor­s got creative, going a er the powerful financiers traffickin­g illegal gold.

In August, they moved to suspend the operations of three major gold dealership­s, asking a court to fine them 10.6 billion reais. The ruling is pending.

But there are powerful interests in play.

“Gold-sector lobbyists regularly meet with the environmen­t minister, with top administra­tion officials. They have direct access to the government,” Palmquist says.

“And there’s a very deep-rooted idea here in Brazil that the Amazon is a good that exists to be exploited.”

That may be changing. In downtown Sao Felix, Dantas Ferreira is fishing at dusk on the Xingu River, a bright blue Amazon tributary, just upstream from where another river, the Fresco, dumps its turbid, brownstain­ed waters into the Xingu’s crystallin­e ones.

Authoritie­s say the Fresco is badly polluted with illegal mining waste.

Like most people in Sao Felix, Ferreira, a 53-year-old ca le rancher, is a proud Bolsonaro supporter.

But he says the environmen­tal destructio­n in the region has gone too far.

The president “needs to stop this,” he says.

“If they don’t crack down on illegal mining, our water is never going to be normal again.”

 ?? ?? Aerial view showing the meeting point of the Fresco River (top) and Xingu river (bo om) at the city of Sao Felix do Xingu, Para state, Brazil.
Aerial view showing the meeting point of the Fresco River (top) and Xingu river (bo om) at the city of Sao Felix do Xingu, Para state, Brazil.
 ?? ?? A woman walks with a toddler along a promenade in front of the banks of the Xingu River during sunset at the city of Sao Felix do Xingu, Para state, Brazil
A woman walks with a toddler along a promenade in front of the banks of the Xingu River during sunset at the city of Sao Felix do Xingu, Para state, Brazil
 ?? ?? Heavy machinery is parked next to a billboard in support of Brazil’s president Jair Bolsonaro at the city of Eldorado do Carajas, Para state, Brazil,
Heavy machinery is parked next to a billboard in support of Brazil’s president Jair Bolsonaro at the city of Eldorado do Carajas, Para state, Brazil,
 ?? — AFP photos ?? View of an illegal gold mine in Sao Felix do Xingu, Para state, Brazil.
— AFP photos View of an illegal gold mine in Sao Felix do Xingu, Para state, Brazil.
 ?? ?? Munduruku poses for a picture in Brasilia.
Munduruku poses for a picture in Brasilia.

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