3/27/2019

BRAZIL : HIGH RISK ''ISOLATED TRIBE'' EXPEDITION


BRAZIL'S agency for indigenous peoples has sent off a rare and high-risk expedition hoping to contact a small, isolated group in the Amazon and reunite its members with some of their relatives, saying the move is necessary to avoid bloodshed in an area near the border with Peru.

A team of nearly two dozen sponsored by the FUNAI agency headed up the Coari River over the weekend looking for the group of at least 22 people who are members of the widespread Korabo indigenous community and live in the Javari valley, in the northern state of Amazons.

Brazil army, federal police and health ministry are backing the initiative, which could take weeks.

The last time  FUNAI organized such a big expedition was in 1996, also in that region. The Javari valley, an area of more than 8 million hectares [nearly 31,000 square miles] , or bigger than Hungary, is home to the concentration of isolated indigenous peoples in Brazil, amounting to at least 11 groups.

The initiative is the agency's first major operation during the administration of President Jair Bolsonaro, a far-right former army captain who pledged to stop demarcation of indigenous lands and allow miners to operate in their lands.

Brazilian law says that contact with isolated tribes can be used only as a last resort to preserve their lives.

Bruno Pereira, FUNAI's coordinator for isolated indigenous peoples who is leading the expedition, said the objective is to ease tensions between the isolated groups of  Korubos and a group of indigenous Matis who lives about 12 miles [20 kilometres]  away.

The Matis contacted the Korubos in 2013, initially in a friendly manner, but in the following year there was a deadly clash between the two groups. FUNAI said.

After that incident, some of the Korubos migrated from the area, and reported that those who stayed mistakenly believed their relatives had been killed by the Matis. Some of the Korubos who left are in FUNAI's expedition.

Pereira said the Matis have repeatedly requested an intervention of Brazil's government because they believe the isolated Korubos who will want revenge soon.

''There has been conflict and death,''  Pereira tolf The Associated Press and three other media organizations at the FUNAI office in Brazil's  capital.

''This proximity of  20 kilometers between them  is a catastrophic scenario. If there is new confrontation with the Matis, the Korubos will respond in their traditional way : violence.' [Agencies]

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