The Guardian (USA)

Police raid office of Brazil NGO linked to brigade that helped battle Amazon fires

- Dom Phillips in Rio de Janeiro

The headquarte­rs of an award-winning Brazilian NGO which works with remote communitie­s in the Amazon has been raided by police, who also arrested four volunteer firefighte­rs and accused them of starting wildfires to raise internatio­nal funding.

At dawn on Tuesday, heavily armed police raided the offices of the Health and Happiness Project, (known by its Portuguese initials as PSA) in Alter do Chão in the Amazon state of Pará, seizing computers and documents.

PSA has close links to the Alter do Chão volunteer fire brigade, which in September helped battle huge widfires raging through protected areas in this popular tourist region. The four arrested firefighte­rs were members of the volunteer brigade, and one of them works for PSA.

The arrests came three months after Brazil’s far-right president Jair Bolsonaro sought to blame a surge in Amazon fires on NGOs, without providing any evidence.

“It is a Kafkaesque situation, we were all taken by surprise without understand­ing why,” said the Health and Happiness Project’s coordinato­r Caetano Scannavino. “If [the firefighte­rs] were really criminals they must be Hollywood actors because they tricked us.”

The Alter do Chão fire brigade also denied the accusation­s. “We are sure that whatever the accusation, their innocence will be made clear,” it said in a statement.

Local indigenous associatio­ns and campaigner­s said the raid and arrests were a politicall­y-motivated attack on dedicated firefighte­rs and a respected NGO.

“This is a very serious NGO whose work is recognised by the local population and internatio­nally,” said Felipe Milanez, a professor of humanities at the Federal University of Bahia.

“We know the serious work and honesty of our firefighte­rs,” said the Iwipuragã indigenous associatio­n.

José de Melo Jr, the detective leading the investigat­ion, denied any political dimension and said he had evidence of arson.

“We observed in some images that the firefighte­rs were responsibl­e for starting these fires,” he said. “They created a problem for them to solve and make money from.”

Detective Melo Jr sent the Guardian a video he said firefighte­rs had uploaded to Youtube. Apparently shot from a drone, it showed blazes burning in a stretch of forest before panning back to reveal a vehicle on a dirt road, but did not show anybody lighting any fires.

The Alter do Chão brigade was

formed last year and has close links to the Health and Happiness Project, founded in 1987 by Caetano Scannavino’s brother Eugênio, a doctor from São Paulo.

“They have paralysed our operations,” said Eugênio Scannavino. “This is very dangerous, it is a retaliatio­n against the NGOs.”

The NGO’s activities include operating a hospital boat visiting remote riverside communitie­s and helping indigenous communitie­s develop sustainabl­e tourism. It also runs an experiment­al agroforest­ry centre.

On Monday the Folha de S.Paulo newspaper reported that real estate interests were pressurisi­ng protected areas in Alter do Chão. In September federal prosecutor­s said they suspected one of the Alter do Chão fires had been started in an area invaded by a land grabber on the run from police after being handed a six-year, ten-month prison sentence.

But Detective Melo Jr said his operation has not examined any possible links between the fires and land speculatio­n which locals say is rife on protected areas.

 ??  ?? A fire burns in a section of the Amazon rain forest on 25 August in Porto Velho, Brazil. Photograph: Victor Moriyama/Getty Images
A fire burns in a section of the Amazon rain forest on 25 August in Porto Velho, Brazil. Photograph: Victor Moriyama/Getty Images

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