Only End of Land Disputes Will Solve Indian Problems in Brazil

A new pediatric unit, with 20 beds, was inaugurated earlier this month at the University Hospital of Dourados, in Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil. Six of the beds will be for intensive care (ICU). Six children have died of malnutrition in Indian villages since the beginning of this year.

Besides hospital care, the National Health Foundation (Funasa) is evaluating all the children in the region to discover new cases of malnutrition.


In Dourados alone, there are six medical teams, each one consisting of a doctor, nurse, and nutritionist. The campaign began around at the end of February.


One of the teams works with infants up to six-months old, one attends neighboring villages, three see to routine appointments, while the sixth is specifically encharged with children in situations of nutritional risk.


There are already 140 children in this last category. Their families are receiving basic food baskets, milk, and a multi-food mixture to combat malnutrition. The baskets are also being distributed to families that are not running nutritional risks, 329 in all so far.


Last week, health teams evaluated 200 children from the municipality of Tucuru. Other scores of children from Paranhos, Iguatemi, and Kaapó were also examined by the medical teams.


These are considered emergency measures. In the long run, what is needed are “projects that provide structural solutions to the problems of the land and invasions, since many Indians are unemployed,” said the coordinator of FUNASA’s activities in Dourados, Antônio Fernandes, a Cabinet adviser in the Foundation’s Department of Indian Health.


The Missionary Indigenous Council (Cimi) does not believe in short or medium-term results. According to the Cimi press office, the only way to resolve the situation in Dourados is to deal with the land problems.


Translation: David Silberstein
Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

Secrecy Violation at Brazil’s Savings Bank Seems Like Inside Job

Brazil’s Caixa Econômica Federal (the state-run Mortgage and Savings Bank) reports that it has ...

Por aí

  Native song Ihu in the Kamayurá Indian language means everything you learn by ...

A Brazilian

Want to Be a Prostitute? The Brazilian Government Can Teach You How

The Brazilian government maintains in the site of the Labor and Employment Ministry a ...

Brazil Goes High Tech to Fight Fruit Fly

Brazil’s Ministry of Science and Technology will invest US$ 1.34 million in a project ...

Despite New Civil Union Law Discrimination Against Gays Will Go on in Brazil

Brazil has finally taken a huge step towards the non-discrimination of gay-union. The country’s ...

It Will Take 10 Years or More Before Half of Brazil Gets Hooked to the Internet

Despite the fact that every four months one million new Brazilians get access to ...

Brazilian Shoe Exports to Middle East Grows Above Average

Brazilian shoe industries had revenues of US$ 15.5 million with exports to the Arab ...

In Brazil, Quotas and Scholarship Bring 5% More Blacks to College

The number of Afro-descendant students entering Brazilian universities in 2004 grew 5% in comparison ...

Brazil’s Finance Minister Promises Long Cycle of Growth

In testimony before the Brazilian Senate Economic Affairs Commission (CAE), Brazil’s Minister of Finance, ...

Brazil to Spend US$ 60 Billion in Ten-Year Energy Plan

A Ten-Year Plan for the Electricity Sector, which has just been released by the ...