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Brazil's Indigenous Awa Tribe At Risk

Brazil Indigenous Awa Tribe

By MARCO SIBAJA   06/06/12 12:05 PM ET  AP

BRASILIA, Brazil -- For generations, the Awa lived far from the rest of humanity, picking fruit, hunting pigs and monkeys and following the seasons' rhythms in their patch of the lush Brazilian Amazon rainforest.

Then the rest of the world found the Awa. Loggers and ranchers came, cutting into the tribe's ancestral lands in search of profits. So did a rail line where trains shuttle tons of iron ore through the forest, from mines in the heart of the Amazon to Atlantic Ocean ports, with much of it headed for Chinese steel mills.

The threat to the Awa grew so grave that it caught the attention of the British-based indigenous rights group Survival International, which designated them "the world's most endangered tribe" and made their preservation its top campaign priority this year.

While the Awa may face the most immediate threat, tribes across Brazil are locked in the same struggle as they battle loggers, ranchers, miners and farmers who often invade government-demarcated reserves. Brazil's maturing economy is driving much of the development, as is renewed strength of the country's farm sector, which recently pushed through reforms loosening Brazil's forest protection law.

Watchdog groups say more conflict is inevitable as government-backed projects such as hydroelectric dams and roads bring thousands of settlers to remote areas. Two bills now working their way through Brazil's Congress would further open indigenous territory to development and potentially weaken tribes' hold on their land.

"We're seeing that the conflicts Indians are having are becoming more potent in recent years, with a series of violent clashes stoked by the agenda of the federal government to develop remote areas," said Cleber Buzatto, executive director of the Brazil-based indigenous rights group CIMI.

For the Awa and other tribes, however, contact with the outside world hasn't just brought threats: Help is also on the way.

The issue will take center stage during this month's "People's Summit" in Rio de Janeiro, a gathering linked to the annual World Social Forum, also held in Brazil. The summit is expected to draw thousands of activists to an alternative to the United Nations' Rio+20 conference on sustainable development happening in Rio at the same time.

The plight of the formerly isolated Awa even drew the attention of Academy Award-winning actor Colin Firth, who appeared in a Survival International video urging people to contact Brazilian Justice Minister Jose Eduardo Cardozo and tell him to send police to protect indigenous reserves.

"This is our chance right now to actually do something," Firth says in the clip.

On Tuesday, Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff created two new nature reserves, as well as seven indigenous territories in the Amazon, covering thousands of square miles across the country.

For Brazilian farm groups, protecting tens of thousands of indigenous people is too high a price to pay for blocking production of soy, beef and other agricultural goods, exports of which have helped fuel rising fortunes in Brazil and a growing middle class. In total, 11 percent of Brazilian territory and 22 percent of the Amazon have been turned over to indigenous groups.

"Who benefits from this? Not our country, which today enjoys the best and cheapest food in the world and boasts of being the globe's second-largest food exporter," Sen. Katia Abreu, president of Brazil's National Agriculture and Livestock Federation, wrote in a recent opinion article for the newspaper Folha de S. Paulo.

"Neither do the Indians, who as their numbers show don't need more physical space, but sanitation, education and an efficient health system. They need, in short, a better life, like all of us."

At a news conference on Monday, Abreu added that any expansion of indigenous reserves beyond those originally established before 1993 is "not in accordance with the constitution and lawless."

Federal agencies responsible for protecting the indigenous say they are doing virtually everything in their power to stop the encroachment, but acknowledge their powers are limited while policing with limited means roughly 480,000 square miles of Indian reserves, an area larger than Sweden.

As a sign of the government's limited reach in the Amazon, about 180 illegal sawmills have sprung up around the Awa's land, often in plain sight, with giant trucks roaring through forest roads day and night bringing fresh lumber.

In Mato Grosso do Sul state, the 40,000-strong Guarani-Kaiowa tribe has seen many members pushed into makeshift camps along highways and tent villages along rivers, as they lobby to have their lands recognized legally.

Economic hardship has sparked a rash of suicides. More than 550 tribe members killed themselves from 2000 to 2011, according to statistics from Brazil's secretariat on indigenous health. An additional 282 were murdered, mostly in fights over land, between 2003 and 2011, according to CIMI, making up half of all native people killed in Brazil during the period. Guarani-Kaiowa elder Nisio Gomes was gunned down in November by masked men, his body dragged into a waiting pickup and spirited away. His remains have yet to be found.

"We've gone through many difficulties, and I can't even walk in the cities because of the risks," said Valmir Gomes, Nisio's son, while lobbying in Brasilia for the tribe's own reserve. "We need the demarcation so that we can freely walk on our own lands."

Indigenous activists, however, say experience has shown demarcating land is clearly not enough.

CIMI registered 33 invasions of reserves in 2010, the most recent year for which statistics are available. At least 10 of those conflicts turned deadly, with violent fights breaking out between the indigenous and those entering the land. That's roughly the same number of invasions and conflicts CIMI has reported annually over the last five years.

The Brazilian government officially recognized the Awa reserve – some 455 square miles in Maranhao, Brazil's poorest state – in 2005, but the incursions continued. That's included people entering with guns and threatening federal agents charged with patrolling the area. Satellite images show that nearly a third of the Awa's forest has been logged and much of the area taken over by cattle ranchers and farmers. Of the tribe's few hundred members, an estimated 60 to 100 of them have never had any contact with the outside world.

In a Survival International video, Wamaxua Awa, a young Awa, says he spent years running away from outsiders encroaching on tribal land before recently leaving the forest and living in a village with other contacted Awa. His three brothers still live deep inside the forest, he says.

"When I lived in the forest I had a good life," he says in a soft, timid voice while wearing a modern, V-neck shirt. "Now if I meet one of the uncontacted Awa in the forest, I'll say, `Don't leave! Stay in the forest.' I'd tell them to stay, that it's better in the forest. `There's nothing in the outside for you,' I'd say."

___

Associated Press writers Jenny Barchfield in Rio de Janeiro, Bradley Brooks, Stan Lehman and Renata Brito in Sao Paulo and Jack Chang in Mexico City contributed to this report.

Loading Slideshow...
  • In this Aug. 2010 photo released in 2012 by Survival International, Awa Indians stand in a forest in Maranhao state, Brazil. For generations, the Awa lived far away from the rest of humanity, following the seasons' rhythms in the lush Brazilian Amazon rainforest. Then the rest of the world found the Awa. Watchdog groups say conflict is inevitable as government-backed projects such as hydroelectric dams and roads bring thousands of settlers to remote areas. Two bills now working their way through Brazil's Congress would further open indigenous territory to development and potentially weaken tribes' hold on their land. (AP Photo/Domenico Pugliese, Survival International)

  • In this Nov. 2011 photo released in 2012 by Survival International, an Awa Indian girl plays over a river in Maranhao state, Brazil. (AP Photo/Survival International)

  • In this Nov. 2011 photo released in 2012 by Survival International, Awa Indians point their bow and arrows in Maranhao state, Brazil. (AP Photo/Survival International)

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BRASILIA, Brazil -- For generations, the Awa lived far from the rest of humanity, picking fruit, hunting pigs and monkeys and following the seasons' rhythms in their patch of the lush Brazilian Amazon...
BRASILIA, Brazil -- For generations, the Awa lived far from the rest of humanity, picking fruit, hunting pigs and monkeys and following the seasons' rhythms in their patch of the lush Brazilian Amazon...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joseph Fattal
09:28 PM on 06/09/2012
Their women got nice boobs on them.
05:15 PM on 06/09/2012
They knew how to pose for the action shoot picture, l doubt the story.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
fa8id
What came 1st: mental crisis or the financial one?
03:24 PM on 06/09/2012
I really wish to study the prevalence of cancer among those people. I have a strong belief that the causes of cancer are related to the environment that we live in and the food that we eat.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
fa8id
What came 1st: mental crisis or the financial one?
03:21 PM on 06/09/2012
Wonderful photos. Lots of fun and innocence.
A great proof that we could live and enjoy our lives without having too much money, toys and cosmetics.
They look Chinese!!

May God save them and preserve their happiness :)
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
redsoxpagan
01:45 PM on 06/09/2012
Oh, yes, those poor dears being deprived of such necessities as clothes made in sweat shops, computers made with slave labor, Barbie Dolls, cd's, gas guzzling cars, obesity, drowning in credit card debt. Oh yes, let's shove "western civilization" down their throat.
It's not a case of denying them our misguided concept of civilization. It's our arrogance of thinking we are superior and have the right to deny them the way of life they prefer.
The truth is, bring civilization is a way to undermine their culture, which then makes it easier to grab their land for the profit of the few.
Protecting these people and the lands will protect Brazil in the long run from the short sighted stupidity of the profit marauders.
As for healthcare, the main reason they need healthcare is to deal with the diseases the non-indigenous bring by invading their land.
sjaent2001
Change gets Challenged, changer gets Cross/poison
07:38 PM on 06/08/2012
""""The World's Most Endangered Tribe"""------------ the story says one thing and the pictures shows another, the young are aiming high, so they have their targets in focus. A picture speaks thousand words.
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erebus99
Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent
08:55 AM on 06/08/2012
You know, a lot of people in the rest of the world are killed all the time by falling joy bullets, and when there aren't a lot of you to begin with, standing in groups and shooting arrows straight up might not be a good idea.
04:41 PM on 06/08/2012
lol
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future primitive
Voice in the Wilderness
04:19 AM on 06/09/2012
Tribes like this hunt monkeys that live up in the jungle canopy, both with arrows like the photo and with blow guns. Foliage is thick and they shoot pretty much straight up to hit them. Although some tribes attach a long thin vine to arrows when hunting primates. I don't know how this tribe hunts and you can't tell from the picture. If you could see the tips in the photo we could know. Many projectile points have a complex breakaway tip, to keep the monkeys from pulling them out. Could be shooting birds. Who knows. But these people usually carry a very small number of specialized tip arrows for different game, and you probably couldn't get them to shoot one just for the photo.
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WoodyCPM
Now what?
11:43 PM on 06/07/2012
I'm afraid the Awa are doomed. It will be sore comfort to them but so are those who have stolen their land and will in time end their existence. We will all vanish in the coming ecological and planetary disasters and the resultant collapse of our civilization. The mindless, greedy, wholesale consumption of the biosphere cannot be sustained forever. We are all guilty.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
11:17 PM on 06/07/2012
so, this is the lost tribe?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WorkhelpWorkhelp
Control your money locally. Charter banks now.
12:33 AM on 06/08/2012
Soon to be dead tribe. Can't fight the money. It's over.
10:49 PM on 06/07/2012
I notice that there are not many people willing to turn their back on the corrupting ‘evils’ of modern society and head off into the wilderness to live the life of a hunter-gatherer. The fact is that for no good reason other than sentimentality and an odd sense of guilt many Westerners think that it is noble and moral to deny certain sections of humanity all the advantages of civilisation they luxuriate in. Hypocrites.
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photo
10:47 AM on 06/09/2012
Live and let live. What you call "advantages of civilisation" is just your personal opinion, so calling westerners hypocrites is not quite right.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
redsoxpagan
01:41 PM on 06/09/2012
Oh, yes, those poor dears being deprived of such necessities as clothes made in sweat shops, computers made with slave labor, Barbie Dolls, cd's, gas guzzling cars, obesity, drowning in credit card debt. Oh yes, let's shove "western civilization" down their throat.
It's not a case of denying them our misguided concept of civilization. It's our arrogance of thinking we are superior and have the right to deny them the way of life they prefer.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Raw Ron
Fox news: we distort, you comply
10:34 PM on 06/07/2012
Capitalism has no respect for the planet. Nothing can ever get in the way of making a buck. This cant happen forever, either we find a balance or we can kiss us butts goodby but not before the world is plunged into a resource war.
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WoodyCPM
Now what?
11:54 PM on 06/07/2012
The human race will not find a balance. We're too greedy, lazy, piggish, self-centered and dumb, ruled by our passions and our superstitions. All our tribes are. It's the human race and it will finally do itself in.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WorkhelpWorkhelp
Control your money locally. Charter banks now.
12:34 AM on 06/08/2012
"Yippie! We're all gonna die!"

Country Joe
09:03 PM on 06/07/2012
They will do what they did to the American Indians, run them off there land and give them the worst land possible to live on. And tell them there doing them a favor. We are killing our planet!
08:56 PM on 06/07/2012
They will do what they did to the American Indians. We will destroy our planet. They have been happy for generations, but now they know what best for them???
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
linmarco
03:05 PM on 06/07/2012
Guess who's going to win this one? The multinationals do as the please and no one dares say a thing about it. On occasion someone will defy them but it is usually at their peril. Some of the world's most beautiful hardwoods, interesting animals species, and overall gorgeous natural scenery are to be found in the Brazilian and other South American countries' forests. Multinationals can be a rapacious bunch and they dont give a hoot nor holler about nature and its offerings. To them nature is to be found in mountains of cash and other holdings. Such is life.
09:05 PM on 06/07/2012
It makes me sick. Thats also were all our cures come from.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
g5user1usa
03:04 PM on 06/07/2012
There's no reason for tribes like this to exist anymore, running around naked in the forest because pretty soon there won't be any more forests. They might as well trade in their bows for smartphones as the wild pigs and other animals they hunted disappear along with the forests. It's already been decided that lumber and the wealth it brings is more important than the indigenous culture's lifestyle. Once fast food restaurants are introduced to these natives, they'll wonder why they spent so much time in the forest away from civilization.
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Catriona
Wha daur meddle wi me?
07:43 PM on 06/07/2012
Read the article, did you? Read the last two paragraphs.
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WoodyCPM
Now what?
11:55 PM on 06/07/2012
Wow, nothing like advocating a little genocide.