Texarkana Gazette

Rio’s Carnival parade makes urgent plea to stop the illegal mining in Indigenous lands

- DIANE JEANTET AND FABIANO MAISONNAVE

RIO DE JANEIRO — Carnival dancers have taken the biggest stage in Rio de Janeiro to pay tribute to Brazil’s largest Indigenous group and pressure President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva to deliver on promises to eradicate illegal mining.

Carnival has long been a platform for samba schools to protest. Percussion­ists had “Miners out” written across the skins of their drums as participan­ts marched through the Sambadrome on Sunday evening, delivering their message to more than 70,000 revelers and millions watching live on television.

“The chance that’s left for us is an Indigenous Brazil,” they said as part of Salgueiro’s samba school’s tribute to the Yanomami — one year after Lula declared a public health emergency for the group in the Amazon. They suffer from malnutriti­on and diseases such as malaria as a consequenc­e of illegal mining.

“Ours is a cry for help from Brazil and the world in general,” said Davi Kopenawa, a Yanomami leader and shaman who advised the samba school. “My hope is that the world, upon hearing our call, will put pressure on the Brazilian government to remove all the miners, destroyers of our mother Earth, who are soiling the water and killing fish.”

Kopenawa paraded with feathered armbands and headdress, plus a beaded necklace depicting a jaguar. Thirteen other Yanomami participat­ed.

Sônia Guajajara, who leads the Ministry of Indigenous Peoples created in 2022 under Lula, congratula­ted Kopenawa and Salgueiro on Monday for their efforts recounting the group’s long struggle, from colonizati­on to more recent efforts to repeal Indigenous land rights.

Some 30,000 Yanomami live in Brazil’s largest Indigenous territory, spanning more than 9 million hectares (22 million acres) in the northern Amazon rainforest.

Three weeks after assuming the presidency, Lula declared a public health emergency over the effects of illegal mining there and sent the armed forces, doctors, nurses and food. Still, over 300 Yanomami died of various causes in 2023, according to the health ministry.

Lula also created an inter-ministeria­l task force to fight illegal mining and in 2023, Brazil’s environmen­tal agency destroyed a record 33 aircraft found on or near Yanomami territory. The agents also wrecked or apprehende­d mining barges, fuel, Starlink internet units and campsites. Government officials say that since the operation began, areas with illegal mining inside Yanomami territory have dropped 85% and health has improved.

But after the initial success, prosecutor­s, law enforcemen­t and employees of federal environmen­tal agencies say illegal miners are returning.

“We reckon that the miners are exploiting as much as possible because they assess they eventually will have to leave,” Jair Schmitt, head of environmen­tal protection at Brazil’s environmen­tal agency Ibama, told The Associated Press.

Schmitt said miners have adapted to escape detection by working at night, setting camp under the forest canopy and choosing old mining pits instead of clearing forest to open new ones.

Humberto Freire, director of the newly created Amazon and environmen­tal unit of the federal police, said government agencies need to take stronger action.

“We need, for example, the air force to effectivel­y control the airspace over Yanomami land. We need the navy to control the flow of people on rivers. We need the army to do a quality job, too,” Freire said.

Lula had said the armed forces would play a key role, providing logistical support and security to public workers and federal agents who say they fear for their lives.

“There was nearly a massacre of an unprotecte­d population”, said Martins Filho, a professor at Federal University.

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