Brazil’s Munduruku Indians Start a Movement to Save an Amazon Tributary

The Munduruku want to save the Tapajós river Greenpeace has joined forces with an Indigenous Amazonian community in an unofficial demarcation of their land, deep in the heart of the Brazilian Amazon. 

The demarcation is the latest effort in a global campaign to protect the Tapajós River from the construction of a massive dam, the São Luiz do Tapajós (SLT), which would lead to devastating rainforest destruction.

The Munduruku Indigenous Peoples, who have been fighting against the dam and for the formal recognition of their land for many years, have sparked a global movement for the protection of the Tapajós and are calling on global companies to distance themselves from the controversial project.

In July, a group of New Zealanders will arrive at Sawré Muybu Indigenous village to assist the Munduruku.

The Munduruku want to save the Tapajós river

Greenpeace NZ’s Annette Cotter is one of the team currently working to save the Tapajós River.

She says it’s important that New Zealanders follow the story of the fight.

“The Amazon might seem far away, but saving the rainforest is critical for us all. Not only does the Amazon help regulate global weather patterns but its protection is essential if we are to limit dangerous climate change,” she says.

“The Munduruku are asking for global help to protect their land from this huge threat – help that we can all give, no matter where we live.”

Last week, a global petition was launched to “save the heart of the Amazon”. Signatures will form a virtual human chain around the Munduruku territory in an effort to pressure the Brazilian Government to protect it.

Juarez, the chief (cacique) of Munduruku Sawré Muybu Indigenous land, says the movement has relevance across the globe.

“This an important battle not just for the Munduruku people, but for everyone around the world since we are talking about one of the biggest forests that still exist in the planet,” he says.

On the ground, the land demarcation involves marking the land with fifty signs, similar to those used by the Brazilian government, to indicate the territory is Munduruku land.

The demarcation process would normally be executed by the Brazilian Government as the next step in a formal Indigenous Land recognition process.

Placing the signs is just one of a range of activities planned at the Sawré Muybu Indigenous village – another will include installing solar panels in the community.

If approved, the SLT dam would be the first of five planned in the Tapajós River. It would have a reservoir of 729 square kilometers (almost the size of New York City), which would flood part of the Munduruku land, and it would drive an estimated 2,200 km2 of indirect deforestation as a result of roads and other infrastructure related to the construction and migration to the area.

Greenpeace is calling on international companies like Siemens to confirm they will not get involved in the project by supplying components like the generators. Although their company profile is focused on green solutions, Siemens were involved in the controversial Belo Monte dam, the most recent destructive dam to be built in the Amazon.

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazilian Copper Sector Brings the Country Close to US$ 5 Billion

Revenues of the Brazilian copper industry have risen threefold since 2003. The figures were ...

Brazil’s Cohen in Concert in Texas

Even in  “piano town”  the fiendishly difficult “Burleske” by Richard Strauss is rarely performed, ...

Brazilian currency, the real

Brazil Cuts Interest Rates for 14th Time in a Row, to 12.75%

Brazil's Central Bank on Wednesday, March 7, cut the basic reference interest rate Selic ...

Banco do Brasil Adopts Experian’s Experience to Check Clients’ Credit

Experian-Scorex has announced that Banco do Brasil is going to implement its Probe SM ...

NGOs Call Decisions of Brazil’s Biological Diversity Convention Illegitimate

Members of NGOs at the 8th Conference of the Parties to the Biological Diversity ...

Brazil and Cuba: Hugs, Deals and Tears

Brazilian President Lula’s assertion that he would not interfere in Cuba’s internal affairs has ...

Mercosur Asks in Brazil: Where’s the Money for Haiti?

A joint communiqué from the Mercosur summit, which took place on Friday in Ouro ...

US Forum on Brazil Deals with Election, Resilience and External Shock

José Sérgio Gabrielli, CEO of Brazilian state-controlled oil company Petrobras, will deliver the key ...

American Tourist Cuts Short Trip to Brazil After Being Robbed by Policeman

Levi Shabtai, 64, an American tourist traveling in Brazil was robbed by a policeman ...

Iraq – Brazil Watches and Waits

Lula is not a hypocrite like France’s Jacques Chirac. Brazil knows it makes no ...