Brazil: Indigenous communities reel from illegal gold mining
Spike in violence linked to illegal mining activities prompts Indigenous communities to demand protection.
An Yanomami man stands near an illegal gold mine during Brazils environmental agency operation against illegal gold mining on indigenous land, in the heart of the Amazon rainforest, in Roraima state, Brazil April 17, 2016 [Bruno Kelly/Reuters]
By Sam Cowie
14 Jun 2021
Sao Paulo, Brazil The armed attackers came in boats during the night.
Local leaders told authorities that four boatloads of men arrived last week and threw tear gas canisters at the Maikohipi village, nestled in the Palimiu region in Brazils largest and best-known Indigenous reserve, Yanomami.
The area is home to seven tribal communities flanked by illegal gold mining operations and the attack on June 5 was just one episode in a recent uptick of violence.
We dont have peace, Junior Hekurari, head of Condisi-YY, a Yanomami health council, told Al Jazeera, explaining that the wave of attacks began after a group of tribesmen created a barrier to stop travel up the river and confiscated one illegal mining groups diesel and other equipment.
In this remote region of the Amazon on the banks of the Uraricoera River, gangs of illegal miners, armed with rifles and other high-calibre firearms, have shot at tribesmen and even federal agents during the past month, terrorising communities and spurring calls for action from leaders, residents and advocacy groups.
In early June, United Nations human rights experts deplored the violence against the Yanomami and another Brazil Indigenous group, the Munduruku, also reeling from an uptick in violence linked to illegal mining.
The violence means we cant hunt or tend to our crops, Hekurari said. All we can think about is protecting the community, the children.
Uraricoera River runs through the heart of the Amazon rainforest, in Brazils Roraima State [Bruno Kelly/Reuters]
Mineral-rich region
Bordering Venezuela and home to some 27,000 tribespeople, including groups that live in voluntary isolation, the 96,650sq-km (37,317sq-mile) Yanomami reserve is larger than Portugal and straddles two Brazilian states, Roraima and Amazonas.
More:
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2021/6/14/indigenous-reel-from-brazil-illegal-gold-mining