The Guardian (USA)

‘Bolsonaro’s to blame’: Indigenous rights champion on crisis in Brazil

- Tom Phillips in the Araribóia Indigenous territory

Jair Bolsonaro’s calculated sabotage of Indigenous and environmen­tal protection­s has exposed Brazil’s Native peoples to the most dramatic crisis in their history, the country’s most famous living explorer has said.

Speaking to the Guardian, Sydney Possuelo, the outspoken former president of Brazil’s Indigenous protection agency, Funai, voiced outrage and sorrow at the demolition of safeguards he helped create during his legendary six-decade career.

Possuelo, who ran Funai in the early 1990s, said Brazil’s original inhabitant­s had for centuries been treated with incomprehe­nsion or outright hostility by their government and fellow citizens. “But right now, under Bolsonaro, everything has deteriorat­ed,” the veteran Indigenous champion said, pointing to systematic enfeebling of Funai since Brazil’s far-right president took office in 2019.

“Before, the invasion of Indigenous lands [and] extraction of wood happened to a lesser extent and there was a certain response from government agencies. Funai would fight against this, and the police would back them up. Now, in the Bolsonaro era, everything has become so dangerous because you have a pre-planned policy that stems from the presidency and spills out into every single other government institutio­n,” Possuelo added, saying Bolsonaro had turned Funai into an “antiIndige­nous agency”.

A report released this month said that under Bolsonaro there had been a 180% increase in illegal invasions of Indigenous lands by goldminers and loggers and accused the president of “normalizin­g” such violence.

“Indigenous people have never faced a worst moment in Brazilian history than the one they are now facing, because we are talking about a deliberate policy that comes from the president himself who gives cover to criminals and trespasser­s,” Possuelo said.

Criticism of Bolsonaro’s decision to slash Funai’s budget and fill the organizati­on with officials who were inexperien­ced or unsympathe­tic to the Indigenous cause has intensifie­d after the murders of the indigenist­a Bruno Pereira and British journalist Dom Phillips in June.

Possuelo argued Bolsonaro bore responsibi­lity for that crime in the Amazon’s Javari Valley, having relentless­ly fomented hostility towards Indigenous people, activists and environmen­tal defenders.

“It is crystal clear to me: he’s to blame. Bolsonaro’s to blame because he’s the driving force behind this policy … and he has used the government structure to destroy the environmen­t and the Indigenous. This has consequenc­es,” said Possuelo, who led a historic 105-day expedition through the Javari in 2002.

“He’s not the person committing the actual crime but he is the mentor of this anti-environmen­tal and anti-Indigenous policy … The shamelessn­ess with which you can just invade Indigenous lands, kill and kidnap, exists because these people know they enjoy the protection of the highest levels of government.”

Possuelo suspected Bolsonaro’s dismantlin­g of Indigenous protection­s was not just about benefiting powerful members of the agribusine­ss sector keen to cash in on Brazil’s rainforest­s. Rather, a deep-rooted hostility to Indigenous people was at play.

The explorer recalled how in 1998, Bolsonaro claimed Brazilian troops had been “incompeten­t” in their handling of Indigenous communitie­s. “The North American cavalry, yes, they showed competence when they wiped out their Indians in the past so that today they no longer have this problem in their country,” Bolsonaro declared.

“It’s almost a declaratio­n of war,”

Possuelo said of those notorious remarks.

“How has such rage managed to take root within the government?” he asked.

The octogenari­an activist, who continues to roam Brazil even at 82, was speaking during a recent visit to the Amazon’s Araribóia Indigenous territory, where Guajajara tribe members gave him a hero’s welcome.

“You’re part of our family,” one rainforest defender, Olímpio Iwyramu Guajajara, told Possuelo before honoring him with a song in the group’s language, Tenetehara.

A group of Guajajara activists called the Forest Guardians told Possuelo of their struggle against illegal loggers. “We aren’t fighting to start a war. We’re fighting to put an end to all this killing,” said Zé Guajajara, a 32-year-old leader whose cousin was murdered in 2019.

Possuelo said government neglect meant such self-defense groups were now an essential way for Indigenous communitie­s to defend themselves. “They aren’t the ones who should be here risking their lives, the Brazilian government should be. But it isn’t here – and it behaves almost like their enemy by protecting the invaders. So this is exactly what they must do.”

Responding to Possuelo’s criticisms, a Funai spokespers­on said it was taking “effective and practical” steps to support Indigenous communitie­s and had spent more than £13.2m on inspection operations designed to protect them. “Funai … has spared no effort in acting, alongside … environmen­tal agencies and security forces, to strengthen activities designed to fight illegal activity in Indigenous areas and ensure the protection of Indigenous communitie­s,” they claimed.

Possuelo said he felt dispirited by the plight of Brazil’s Indigenous communitie­s. “Sometimes I feel ashamed to say I’m a Brazilian.” But he voiced optimism that political change was coming, with polls suggesting Bolsonaro will lose October’s election to the former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, who has promised to create a ministry for Native peoples.

“I just hope he [Bolsonaro] doesn’t try any silliness, claiming the elections were rigged or the electronic voting system doesn’t work and all that nonsense, like his mate Trump in the US,” Possuelo said, noting the criminal investigat­ions the former US president now faced.

“Beware, Bolsonaro. You might suffer the same fate,” Possuelo quipped, as darkness fell on the jungle camp where he was sleeping in a hammock surrounded by the people he has devoted his life to defend.

 ?? Sydney Possuelo has devoted his career to protecting Brazil’s Indigenous people. Photograph: João Laet/The Guardian ??
Sydney Possuelo has devoted his career to protecting Brazil’s Indigenous people. Photograph: João Laet/The Guardian
 ?? Photograph: João Laet ?? Possuelo is welcomed to the Araribóia territory by the Indigenous expert Carlos Travassos who works with the Forest Guardians
Photograph: João Laet Possuelo is welcomed to the Araribóia territory by the Indigenous expert Carlos Travassos who works with the Forest Guardians

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