Your current location is:{Current column} >>Text
Brazil says it has nearly cleared gold miners from Amazon Yanomami reservation By Reuters
{Current column}5People have watched
IntroductionBy Amanda Perobelli and Anthony BoadleSURUCUCU, Brazil (Reuters) - Brazil has almost squashed the il ...
By Amanda Perobelli and newsolid official websiteAnthony Boadle
SURUCUCU, Brazil (Reuters) - Brazil has almost squashed the illegal gold rush that led thousands of wildcat miners into the Yanomami reservation in the Amazon (NASDAQ:) rainforest and caused a humanitarian crisis of disease and malnutrition, the man in charge of operations said.
The Yanomami, South America's largest Indigenous group living in isolation, have returned to a normal way of life, cultivating crops and hunting game, Nilton Tubino told Reuters in an interview on Friday.
Tubino runs the government office set up by President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva to coordinate action by police and military forces, environmental agents and health workers on the reservation the size of Portugal in the remote Amazon, where 27,000 Yanomami live.
"We are seeing many of them bathing in the rivers and out hunting again, and clearings being planted for food," he said.
In hundreds of operations since March, army and navy troops, backed up by environmental and Indigenous protection agencies, have destroyed mining camps and gold prospects.
They have dynamited 42 clandestine airstrips used by the miners in the rainforest, set fire to 18 aircraft, seized 92,000 liters of diesel, sunk 45 dredging barges, destroyed 700 pumps, and dismantled 90 Starlink dishes that allowed the miners to warn each other about enforcement teams, Tubino said. A radar has been set up in the reservation to monitor clandestine planes.
Tubino said deaths from malaria brought by the miners were down, and malnutrition had been controlled with government food parcels. The government has reopened medical outposts and is planning to build a hospital in Surucucu, a remote village near the border with Venezuela.
A Reuters photographer in Surucucu earlier this month saw evidence of illegal miners inside the reservation still, but with the situation improved from last year.
Junior Hekurari, head of the Yanomami health council Condisi, said the government had evicted the miners and overcome the health crisis, but that the mining had affected their ability to obtain food, with river waters polluted by mercury.
"The waters are poisoned and there are no fish," he said. "Our people believe the earth has been contaminated and that is why the crops are not growing."
Shortly after taking office, Lula launched a massive enforcement operation in February 2023 to evict some 25,000 gold miners from the Yanomami territory. With backing from the armed forces, the government action succeeded in expelling 80% of the miners.
But once the military withdrew, miners started to return, joining others who had hidden in the forest.
Tubino said the number of miners remaining is unknown, but this year's operations had significantly reduced their presence and eliminated more than half the gold prospecting areas.
Work is still needed to shut down the supply line that keeps the miners in business, from fuel and food to the buying of their gold nuggets, Tubino added.
Statement: The content of this article does not represent the views of FTI website. The content is for reference only and does not constitute investment suggestions. Investment is risky, so you should be careful in your choice! If it involves content, copyright and other issues, please contact us and we will make adjustments at the first time!
Tags:
Related articles
Dollar edges higher; remains near two
{Current column}By Peter Nurse- The U.S. dollar edged higher in early European trade Thursday, but remained under pr ...
Read moreBitcoin, crypto
{Current column}-- Bitcoin was trading higher on Thursday, while crypto-related stocks also rose, after the top U.S. ...
Read moreRussia launches 28 drones, three missiles at Ukraine
{Current column}(Reuters) -Russia launched 28 attack drones and three cruise missile at Ukraine overnight, Ukraine's ...
Read more
Popular Articles
- Oil prices slip as big draw in crude stocks plays second fiddle to economic jitters By
- Here's when Morgan Stanley thinks the Fed will likely start tapering QT By
- Dow futures slip 0.1%, inflation data, major bank earnings ahead By
- Will Inflation Repeat the 1970s Rollercoaster?
- Debt limit progress, weak Chinese data
- Oil prices dip amid China weakness, rate
Latest articles
-
U.S. arrests 21
-
This week in EVs: Tesla's increased pay and discounted prices
-
On Orthodox Christmas Putin vows to back soldiers who 'defend' Russia By Reuters
-
Oil prices dip amid China weakness, rate
-
Dow futures tick lower, Nordstrom adds 7.1% after earnings By
-
Boeing 737 MAX inspections still being held up By Reuters