The National - News

Illegal loggers kill guardian of the forest in Amazon ambush

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Illegal loggers in the Amazon ambushed an indigenous group that was formed to protect the forest, shooting dead a young warrior and wounding another.

Paulo Paulino Guajajara, or Lobo – wolf in Portuguese – was hunting on Friday inside the Arariboia reservatio­n in Brazil’s Maranhao state when he was shot in the head.

Another Guajajara, Laercio, was wounded but escaped, leaders of the Guajajara tribe said on Saturday.

The clash comes amid an increase in invasions of reservatio­ns by illegal loggers and miners since right-wing President Jair Bolsonaro took office this year and vowed to open up protected indigenous lands to economic developmen­t.

“The Bolsonaro government has indigenous blood on its hands,” Brazil’s pan-indigenous organisati­on Apib, which represents many of the country’s 900,000 native people, said on Saturday.

“The increase in violence in indigenous territorie­s is a direct result of his hateful speeches and steps taken against our people.”

Apib leader Sonia Guajajara said the government was dismantlin­g environmen­tal and indigenous agencies and leaving tribes to defend themselves from invasion of their lands.

“It’s time to say enough of this institutio­nalised genocide,” she said on Twitter.

Brazil’s federal police said they sent a team to investigat­e the circumstan­ces of Paulino Guajajara’s death. Apib said his body was still lying in the forest where he was killed.

The Guajajaras, one of Brazil’s largest indigenous groups with about 20,000 people, set up the Guardians of the Forest in 2012 to patrol a vast reservatio­n.

The area is so large that a small and endangered tribe, the Awa Guaja, live deep in the forest without any contact with the outside world.

Paulino Guajajara, who was in his twenties and leaves behind a son, told Reuters in an interview on the reservatio­n in September that protecting the forest from intruders had become a dangerous task, but his people could not give in to fear.

“I’m scared at times, but we have to lift up our heads and act. We are here fighting,” he said, as he and other warriors prepared to move through the forest towards a logging camp.

“We are protecting our land and the life on it, the animals, the birds, even the Awa who are here too.

“There is so much destructio­n of nature happening, good trees with wood as hard as steel being cut down and taken away. We have to preserve this life for our children’s future,” he said at the time.

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