900 Indians Have Been Killed in Brazil Since 2003

A Guarani Indian from Rio de Janeiro - Tânia Rêgo/ABr According to a report issued by Brazil’s Missionary Indigenous Council in Brasília, almost 900 Indigenous people in Brazil were killed between 2003 and 2015, corresponding to an average of 68 per year.

The report, titled “Violence against Indigenous peoples in Brazil—2015,” included a broad range of types of violence: in 2015, it recorded 31 homicide attempts, 18 homicides, 12 death threats, 13 cases of racism and ethnic-cultural discrimination, nine cases of sexual violence and eight of power abuses.

Indigenous communities are not only affected by violence but also by the lack of public services, with the death of 599 children under 5 years old caused by benign diseases like pneumonia, diarrhea and gastritis in most cases.

The number of suicides rose to 87, half of which were located in Mato Grosso do Sul, which also recorded the highest rate of murders at 36.

A Guarani Indian from Rio de Janeiro - Tânia Rêgo/ABr

“Our children are dying because of the lack of medical assistance and we continue to suffer from serious abuses, including attacks of toxic agrochemicals within Indigenous lands,” said Elson Gomes Kaiowá, leader of the Guarani Kaiowá community in the town of Caarapo. “The use of these products is contaminating the water we use to feed ourselves, among others.”

Agribusiness, he added, also generated conflicts and violence, “Soy, corn and sugarcane are marred with the blood of the Indigenous people.”

Brasil de Fato

Tags:

You May Also Like

Luan Gabriel de Souza

May Luan Inspire Brazilian Legislators to Vote on a Bill to End Police Impunity

Members of Brazil’s Chamber of Deputies should think of Luan Gabriel de Souza’s death ...

Netflix star Wagner Moura - Edison Vara/PressPhoto

Goodwill Ambassador Brazilian ‘Narcos’ Star Is on a Mission: End Slave Labor

As a boy growing up in Brazil’s impoverished northeastern state of Bahia, Brazilian actor ...

Prisoners get medical after a rebellion at the Colônia Agroindustrial prison in Goiânia

Nine Killed, Two Decapitated, 100 escape, in Brazil’s Latest Prison Riot

At least nine people have died in clashes between rival gangs in one of ...

Fisherman Dil Maiko Marinho stands by a felled tree in an area claimed by Cargill in Xingu Island, Brazil. Photo taken August 12, 2023. Thomson Reuters Foundation /André Cabette Fábio

Amazon Residents Accuse US Cargill of Threatening Their Rights and Way of Life

For centuries, riverside communities, including the “quilombola” descendants of enslaved Africans who escaped from ...

Message on the T-shirt: YES to Human Rights in Brazil

Religious Extremism and Intolerance Give Way to Renewed Human Rights in Brazil

The result of Brazil’s election last October was a cause for celebration for many ...

Without Police, Rio’s Drug Lords Show Who Are the Bosses in the Favelas

After the Brazilian government spent tens of millions of dollars securing the city of ...

Military operation at favela Kelson's, in Rio de Janeiro. - Fernando Frazão/ABr

Brazil Breaks Own Record with 63,880 Murders in 2017 or 175 per Day

Brazil had a record number of murders last year, with homicides rising 3.7% from ...

Brazilian Army on a Rio slum - Vladimir Platonow/ABr

Army Back in Rio, This Time Taking Over the Security of the City

Brazil’s military has taken full control of security in Rio de Janeiro and the ...