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Brazil to deploy police to protect Yanomami from miners

Brazil said it would deploy a special security force to protect the Yanomami indigenous reservation.

Brazil to deploy police to protect Yanomami from miners
Yanomami, pictured in the Venezuelan state of Amazonas in 2012, number around 27,000 in Brazil - Copyright POOL/AFP Francisco Seco
Yanomami, pictured in the Venezuelan state of Amazonas in 2012, number around 27,000 in Brazil - Copyright POOL/AFP Francisco Seco

Brazil said Monday it would deploy a special security force to protect the Yanomami indigenous reservation, whose residents have clashed recently with illegal miners encroaching on native lands in the Amazon rainforest.

The measure comes after Brazil’s Supreme Court last month ordered far-right President Jair Bolsonaro’s government to adopt “necessary measures” to protect the Yanomami and Mundurucu peoples’ reservations from wildcat gold miners.

Justice Minister Anderson Torres gave a federal force of police and firefighters a 90-day renewable mandate to “preserve the public order” on Yanomami lands.

The government did not say how big the force would be.

The Yanomami reservation, Brazil’s biggest, spans 96,000 square kilometers (37,000 square miles) in the northern states of Amazonas and Roraima. It is home to around 27,000 people.

Thousands of miners, often linked to organized crime, have invaded the reservation in recent years, sometimes resulting in violence.

Last month, miners who had invaded the indigenous village of Palimiu clashed with inhabitants, leaving four miners and an indigenous man with bullet wounds, according to the Hutukara Yanomami Association (HAY).

The organization said in a recent report that illegal mining expanded 30 percent last year on Yanomami territory, devastating the equivalent of 500 football pitches.

Illegal gold and diamond mining are a leading cause of environmental destruction in the Amazon.

The Yanomami, who are known for their face paint and intricate piercings, were largely isolated from the outside world until the mid-20th century.

They have a history of conflict with illegal miners dating back to the 1970s.

Together with diseases such as measles and malaria, the conflicts decimated the Yanomami population.

Indigenous activists and rights groups say the problem has intensified again since 2019, when Bolsonaro took office vowing to open protected indigenous lands to mining and agribusiness.

Bolsonaro sought to deflect such criticism in a meeting with Yanomami leaders in Amazonas last month.

“If you don’t want mining, there won’t be mining,” he told them.

“There are indigenous brothers in other places, inside and outside the Amazon, that do want mining… and we are going to respect their wishes.”

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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