The Guardian (USA)

Bolsonaro’s ‘surrender of Amazon to crooks played role in murders of Phillips and Pereira’

- Tom Phillips in Rio de Janeiro

Jair Bolsonaro’s demolition of Brazil’s Indigenous and environmen­tal protection services and “surrender of the Amazon to crooks” played a direct role in the murders of Dom Phillips and Bruno Pereira, the politician leading a congressio­nal inquiry into the crime has claimed.

One month after the British journalist and Brazilian Indigenous advocate were killed on the River Itaquaí, three men are in custody: two local fishermen and a third man called Jeferson da Silva Lima.

Federal police initially ruled out the involvemen­t of a more powerful criminal mastermind in a lawless region at the heart of South America’s drug trade, although investigat­ors are examining whether the crime was an ordered assassinat­ion.

Whatever the truth, the politician spearheadi­ng a senate investigat­ion into the killings claimed Brazil’s farright president also bore significan­t blame for having crippled the protection agencies that might have kept the men safe during their trip into the remote Javari Valley region.

“The government is a direct accomplice and participan­t in the murders of both men,” said Randolfe Rodrigues, an opposition senator from the Amazon state of Amapá.

“The Bolsonaro government’s policy of dismantlin­g and destructur­ing [Indigenous and environmen­tal safeguards] is directly responsibl­e for the point the Javari Valley has reached.”

Rodrigues, who visited the region last week, recalled how Bolsonaro once publicly scolded Phillips when the British journalist challenged him over soaring deforestat­ion. “The first thing you need to understand is that the Amazon is Brazil’s, not yours,” the Brazilian nationalis­t told Phillips, a longtime Guardian contributo­r.

The senator claimed Bolsonaro had relinquish­ed control of the Amazon to gangs of illegal miners, hunters and fishermen with links to organised crime, paving the way for the kind of violence that claimed the lives of Phillips and Pereira.

“Bolsonaro has surrendere­d the Amazon to crooks, to crime – and what happened to Dom and Bruno illustrate­s this,” the senator said, denouncing the systematic wrecking of Brazil’s Indigenous and environmen­tal agencies since Bolsonaro took office in 2019.

“There is no more state presence in the Javari Valley region. The Javari Valley no longer has [the environmen­tal agency] Ibama to curb environmen­tal crime. [The Indigenous agency] Funai and the few Indigenous specialist­s who remain are facing death threats and intimidati­on. There are insufficie­nt numbers of federal police there and the Brazilian army also lacks sufficient troops,” Rodrigues said.

“The region has been surrendere­d to illegal fishing, illegal hunting [and] illegal mining – all of which is connected to narco-traffickin­g,” claimed the senator. “Jair Bolsonaro spoke about not surrenderi­ng the Amazon – but he has surrendere­d it to the worst kind of banditry there is.”

Brazil’s presidency did not respond to a request to comment on the claims.

Members of Rodrigues’s nine-senator committee flew to Atalaia do Norte, the riverside portal to the Javari Valley, last week to gather testimony for its two-month investigat­ion.

The politician said he was shocked by the “total absence of state presence and authority” there. He feared further bloodshed as heavily armed environmen­tal criminals continued advancing into the supposedly protected Javari Valley Indigenous territory to plunder its natural riches. The vast expanse of rivers and jungle, on which Phillips was reporting when he was killed, is home to the highest concentrat­ion of uncontacte­d tribes on Earth.

“The region is on the brink of a serious humanitari­an collapse,” Rodrigues warned.

“These criminals are coming in armed with rifles and when they encounter the isolated peoples, the isolated people will react to them. Given that the [criminals] are far better armed, they will promote a tremendous bloodbath. There’s no state to protect the Indigenous people there.”

Rodrigues conceded his committee would have only a “palliative” effect given Bolsonaro’s opposition to environmen­tal and Indigenous protection­s. “While Jair Bolsonaro continues to govern a change of paradigm is inconceiva­ble,” admitted Rodrigues, who hoped voters would end “the Bolsonaro nightmare” in October’s presidenti­al election. Polls suggest Bolsonaro will lose that vote to former left-wing president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, whose campaign Rodrigues is helping coordinate.

However, the senator said the commission would make concrete recommenda­tions, including calling for the removal of the Bolsonaro-appointed head of Funai and “a determined anti-crime offensive” in the Javari Valley.

Rodrigues recalled feeling impotence at the murders of Phillips and Pereira and the realisatio­n the region had been “conquered by crime”.

“It was as if the Brazilian football team had just conceded the fifth goal in a World Cup match and didn’t have the slightest hope of fighting back.” he said.

He felt indignatio­n at Bolsonaro’s attempt to smear the two dead men, by insinuatin­g they were responsibl­e for their own deaths having undertaken an ill-advised “adventure”. “But at the same time it made me feel great courage to fight even harder against him. Bolsonaro is …… one of the worst fascists humanity has ever produced,” Rodrigues said.

Phillips had reported extensivel­y on Brazil’s dismantlin­g of environmen­tal and Indigenous safeguards since Bolsonaro’s conservati­ve predecesso­r, Michel Temer, took office after the 2016 impeachmen­t of Dilma Rousseff.

“At the Funai base in Atalaia do Norte, the town nearest the [Javari] reserve, telephones are cut off and the internet has stopped working. Contracts for fuel and other supplies are being wound up amid rumours it will close,” Phillips wrote in 2018.

The following year he travelled to the Yanomami territory to report on how thousands of illegal goldminers had stormed those lands. “The current …invasion worsened after Bolsonaro took office,” Phillips reported.

Rodrigues said it was crucial the work of Phillips and Pereira be kept alive. “We cannot allow them to be forgotten … Society – not just Brazilian society or Amazonian society – but global society must keep its eyes on the Amazon … We must always stand up and make ourselves heard.”

 ?? Photograph: Roberto Stuckert ?? Randolfe Rodrigues, the Brazilian senator leading a congressio­nal inquiry into the murders of Dom Phillips and Bruno Pereira, visits the Amazon region where they were killed.
Photograph: Roberto Stuckert Randolfe Rodrigues, the Brazilian senator leading a congressio­nal inquiry into the murders of Dom Phillips and Bruno Pereira, visits the Amazon region where they were killed.
 ?? Photograph: Roberto ?? Randolfe Rodrigues visits the Amazon region where Dom Phillips and Bruno Pereira were killed.
Stuckert
Photograph: Roberto Randolfe Rodrigues visits the Amazon region where Dom Phillips and Bruno Pereira were killed. Stuckert

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