The Guardian (USA)

Brazil: judge bans missionari­es from indigenous reserve over Covid-19 fears

- Dom Phillips in Rio de Janeiro

A Brazilian judge has banned a group of Christian missionari­es from entering a vast Amazon indigenous reserve with the world’s highest concentrat­ion of isolated tribes, citing risks from the coronaviru­s pandemic as one of his reasons.

Indigenous leaders and activists hailed the decision as “historic” and expressed hope that it could prevent a genocide in the Javari valley, a remote reserve the size of Austria on Brazil’s western borders.

“Facing with this new coronaviru­s pandemic we wanted to guarantee the rights of indigenous people to isolation,” said Eliesio Marubo, an indigenous lawyer who sought the ruling on behalf of Javari’s indigenous associatio­n Univaja.

Federal judge Fabiano Verli banned three missionari­es, Andrew Tonkin, Josiah McIntyre and Pastor Wilson de Benjamin, from the reserve, along with the controvers­ial missionary group New Tribes Mission of Brazil which recently bought a helicopter to convert isolated peoples in the region.

The judge referred to recentarti­cles about isolated groups’ vulnerabil­ity to common diseases that decimated their population­s in the past and authorised police and army to expel any of the missionari­es found in the reserve.

Brazil has so far seen three confirmed Covid-19 deaths among its indigenous population.

Specialist­s from the indigenous agency Funai believe 16 isolated groups could live in the Javari valley. Concerns for their safety soared when a former New Tribes missionary was put in charge of Funai’s isolated indigenous department.

Verli wrote that Tonkin, a North American missionary, had been seen in the reserve and noted “clear indication­s of an attempt at cultural assimilati­on” of an isolated group.

Brazil’s O Globo newspaper said Tonkin was seen last year trying to make contact with an isolated group from the Korubo tribe using a hydroplane and was preparing a new expedition. Tonkin told O Globo the accusation was “gossip”.

New Tribes Mission said the group had removed all its missionari­es from indigenous reserves by 23 March and “does not work with isolated peoples”. Funai said Brazil’s attorney general’s office would analyse the ruling.

“Every time that rights are threatened in the Javari valley we will go to court,” said Beto Marubo, an indigenous leader from the reserve.

 ??  ?? An aerial view of indigenous land in the Amazon rainforest, Brazil. Photograph: João Laet/The Guardian
An aerial view of indigenous land in the Amazon rainforest, Brazil. Photograph: João Laet/The Guardian

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