Whole Indian Tribe in Brazil Falls Ill for Lack of Water and Sanitation

Pataxo Indians from Brazil Since the beginning of the year, the 65 families of Brazil's Maxakali people who live in the Verde village in the municipality of Ladainha, in the southeastern Brazilian state of Minas Gerais, have been facing serious health problems due to the lack of sanitation facilities in the area.

The community and organizations that support the Maxakali people will request a federal court to come up with solutions, because, among other problems, doctors are needed and there are virtually no sewage systems in the village.
 
These families from the Maxakali people have been living in this area since January 2007, when the National Foundation for Indigenous People (Funai) bought the land to settle the indigenous group in it.

There are water springs inside the indigenous area, but they are located up in the hills and there are no rivers flowing through the land to distribute this water. One of the main problems faced by them is their difficult access to water.
 
Most families have no running water near them and the quality of the impounded water they use is not good. At the headquarters of the village, water is pumped from a well by an electric pump (in precarious conditions) to two tanks connected to a hose which should distribute it to the whole village, but this system is not operational so far.
 
In January, almost the entire community became sick. People felt abdominal pains, were vomiting, had fever, were fainting, bleeding through the nose, and were feeling weak, among other symptoms.

"At the village, everybody was just lying down, feeling exhausted. Not even the children had enough energy to play," stressed the missionary Gilce Freire, from Cimi's (Indianist Missionary Council) team in the region, who visited the indigenous area two weeks ago.

According to a note issued by the National Health Foundation (Funasa) on January 31, the Indians were affected by a virosis and they are already receiving medical treatment.
 
On January 16, leaders of the Maxakali people and organizations that support the indigenous community met with the coordinator of the Special Indigenous Sanitary District (DSEI) in the city of Valadares to demand solutions to the situation. They requested the presence of a doctor in the area, because there are only two nurses working there, but they have not received any answer so far.
 
The Maxakali indigenous community from the Verde Village, the Regional Mucuri Small Farmers' Association, Cimi, and the Federal University of the Jequitinhonha Valley (Teófilo Otoni campus) will report the situation faced by the indigenous people to the Federal Prosecutor's Office.

Besides requesting the presence of a doctor, they have been stressing that Funasa should urgently implement sanitation projects in the area to avoid intestinal diseases and diseases caused by parasites, among other measures.

Tags:

You May Also Like

NGO Accuses Nestlí© of Scoffing at Brazil’s Law

Since the beginning of its activities in Parque das Àguas (Park of Waters) in ...

Brazil Sugar Industry Urges Europe to Stick to Export Commitment

UNICA, the Brazilian Sugarcane Industry Association, in a letter sent to Commissioner for Agriculture ...

Avian Flu and Weak Dollar Reduce Brazil Chicken Export by 24%

Brazilian exports of chicken meat generated US$ 251.5 million in September, which represented a ...

Brazilian Oil Multinational Petrobras Building 9 New Platforms in 4 Years

The international financial crisis and the resulting postponing of the disclosure of the Petrobras ...

Life Expectancy Jumps 9 Years in Brazil: It’s 71.8

The life expectancy of Brazilians has jumped from 62 years and six months, in ...

UN Says Death of Brazilian General in Haiti Does Not Change Peace Mission

The director of the United Nations (UN) Information Center in Brazil, Carlos dos Santos, ...

Brazil Spends 16% of Its GDP in Social Programs

The Social Direct Budget of the Brazilian federal government in 2004 was US$ 98.98 ...

Colors of Paradise

Landscape architect Burle Marx bought a ranch in Rio in 1949 to store his ...

Ziplux, Brazil’s Answer to Ecological Lamppost

ZIPlux, a company from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, which has developed an innovative method ...

Brazilians Shine at Dubai’s Big 5 Building Fair

Building-sector companies from Brazil participating in the Big 5 Show began closing deals right ...