Brazilian Indians Let All Hostages Go After Protests Against a Dam

Brazilian IndiansA group of Brazilian Indians who had occupied the construction site of a hydroelectric dam and took more than 150 workers hostage in the far southern portion of the country’s Amazon region on Monday have released the last five people they were holding, a Brazilian government spokesman said. 

A spokesman for the National Indian Foundation or FUNAI said that all the people who had been hostages of the Indians had been released before a meeting with the protesters began to try and resolve the crisis.

As night fell, several officials with FUNAI and Iphan, the national institute for Brazil’s historical and artistic heritage, continued negotiating with the Indians to try and get them to leave the Dardanelos dam construction site in the municipality of Aripuanã in Mato Grosso state, which they had occupied on Sunday.

The some 300 Indians from 11 different tribes who over the weekend had taken hostage the 150 or so workers who were constructing the dam earlier on Monday had agreed to exchange them for five engineers from the construction company, but these five individuals were then released about 3 pm local time.

FUNAI confirmed the exchange and said that two of its officials traveled to the dam construction site to negotiate an end to the conflict and the release of the five Águas da Pedra employees.

The Indians are demanding compensation for damage the company did by “dynamiting” an archaeological site considered sacred by the peoples of the region.

FUNAI regional coordinator Antonio Carlos Ferreira de Aquino told reporters that the problems began three years ago when construction work began on the site of an Indian burial ground.

On Sunday, the Indians, equipped with homemade weapons like knives, bows and arrows, detained the workers and held them in their living barracks at the dam site.

The Indians of the region have perpetrated assorted violent incidents in recent years.

“The Indians did not at any time threaten their lives. They calmly asked them to go to their lodgings,” said Brazilian National Indian Foundation, or FUNAI, regional coordinator Antonio Carlos Ferreira de Aquino.

FUNAI is the government agency that handles relations with the Indian tribes.

The Indians are demanding compensation from the authorities for the social, cultural and environmental impact of the dam, located 30 kilometers from their reservation.

The construction firm “dynamited” part of an archaeological site considered sacred by the peoples of the region, Ferreira de Aquino said.

“Over the course of time, the Indians have demanded that they be given compensation, as set forth by the licensing law (for public works projects). Since the hydroelectric dam is going to begin operating at the end of this year, they have lost patience,” the FUNAI official said.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil Says Goodbye to a Writer Who Showed Brazilians Are Second to None

The Brazilian writer, poet and playwright Ariano Suassuna died on July 23 from a ...

In Brazil Human Traffic Gets Help from Authorities

The Latin American Human Rights Institute (Iclei) and the government of Pernambuco are offering ...

Argentina Is Just Jealous, Says Brazil’s Lula

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva yesterday acknowledged tension with Argentina but predicted ...

Brazil Might Leave Bolivia and Appeal to International Court

Brazilian Energy Minister Silas Rondeau said yesterday, October 23, there has been progress in ...

Brazil Denies That It Saved Too Much to Guarantee Surplus

Brazil’s secretary of the National Treasury, Joaquim Levy, declared that the Brazilian government did ...

Brazilian Milton Nascimento Releases U.S. Album

American record company Savoy Jazz has just announced the signing of Brazil’s singer-composer Milton ...

Uruguay is not happy at the way Brazil treats it a Mercosur

Brazil Seems Resigned to Uruguay’s Shunning of Mercosur

Promises and expectations of improved relations between Brazil and Uruguay and for Mercosur following ...

Brazil’s PMDB Decides Not to Expel Party Members with Posts in Cabinet

The National Executive board of the PMDB approved a proposal last week to withdraw ...

Why Brazilians Should Demand the Renationalization of Petrobras

It is imperative that the Brazilian government follow a major global trend and start ...

Brazil’s US$ 36 Billion Surplus Helps Markets

Brazilian and Latin American markets advanced, as investors reacted positively to a string of ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`