Brazil Fears an Isolated Indian Tribe Has Been Victim of Genocide

The Brazilian federal police have launched a major operation to remove settlers and loggers from a remote area of the Amazon that experts believe is home to one of the world’s most isolated Indian tribes, officials said Wednesday, November 30, in Brazil.

Police have arrested 27 people accused of illegal land appropriation and possible genocide in a 120-officer operation in Mato Grosso state, about 2,200 kilometers (1,400 miles) northwest of Rio de Janeiro.

"We perceived that this group of Indians was being systematically persecuted. We found settlements that had been hastily abandoned, with the Indians leaving their belongings behind," Armando Soares Filho, of the Federal Indian Bureau’s Department of Isolated Indians, said in a telephone interview from Brasí­lia, the nation’s capital.

Government anthropologists first detected traces of the tribe in 1998. In 2001, the bureau issued a decree banning outsiders from about 166,000 hectares (410,000 acres) of rainforest, to allow anthropologists to contact the tribe and demarcate a reservation.

The tribe doesn’t have a name, although it has been referred to as the Rio Pardo tribe, after a nearby river. Little is known about the group, except that they likely are hunter-gatherers and have up to 15 members.

This week, Brazil’s Globo TV network showed the first images of the tribe filmed by anthropologists, which showed an Indian cutting a tree trunk in the company of two women.

Soares said the contact proved the Indians exist, but not much else. Anthropologists still don’t know what language the Indians speak or if they are related to other tribes.

The bureau also discovered Brazilians trying to chase the Indians away, and destroy signs of their presence, in order to keep the area from being declared a reservation.

"We found a group of men in the area with global positioning systems, chainsaws, ammunition and two bombs. They were clearly trying to chase the Indians out or exterminate them," said Soares.

He said they also found evidence linking the settlers to local politicians, ranchers and loggers. Based on that, public prosecutors have issued more than 70 arrest warrants and are investigating whether Indians were killed by the group.

The Indian rights group Survival International praised the government’s efforts Wednesday.

"The total destruction of a tribe, however small, is genocide. The land of the Rio Pardo Indians must be recognized and protected now, or their annihilation will be complete," director Stephen Corry, said in a press release.

About 700,000 Indians live in Brazil, mostly in the Amazon region. About 400,000 live on reservations and try to maintain their culture, language and lifestyle.

This article appeared originally in Pravda – www.pravda.ru.

Tags:

You May Also Like

Farm Subsidy Will Be Main Topic of Brazilian President in London

President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has left Brazil Monday morning, March 6, for ...

Brazil Creates Registry for Oil-Sector Small Companies

A national registry in Brazil is going to select products and services suppliers to ...

Despite NAFTA Losses Brazil Footwear Sector Grows

Brazil’s Minister of Development, Industry, and Foreign Trade, Luiz Fernando Furlan, affirmed that, despite ...

Brazilian Diplomat to Thailand and Son Victims of Tsunami

The Brazilian Ambassador to Thailand, Marco Antônio Brandão Diniz, confirmed the death of the ...

LETTERS

Close to 19 million adult Brazilians have become tired of waiting for government help ...

Honey Exports by Brazil Grow 70% in First Half of Year

Exports of honey by Brazil remain high. In June, the country sold the equivalent ...

Anti-Americanism Is Hurting Brazil, Says Former Brazilian Ambassador to the US

The man who represented Brazil in Washington for the last three years is very ...

Rivelino, already a celebrity, from Brazilian Corinthians' Sub-13 team

For the First Time, Brazil Takes Sub-13 Soccer Talent to Mediterranean Cup

Thirty seven Brazilian boys have left to Qatar to pursue a typically Brazilian dream. ...

Brazil Denies Any Shady Deal with Portugal Telecom

Brazil’s Presidential Press Secretary’s Office issued a note, yesterday, August 2, stating that “at ...

Best-seller Books, Plays and Movies

By Brazzil Magazine Copenhagen—Scientists Niels Bohr, from Denmark and German Werner Heisenberg get together ...

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