Hostages Taken by Brazilian Indians Are Freed

Members of four Brazilian Indian groups, the Krikati, Gavião, Awa-guajá and Guajajara, have now released four hostages they had maintained in captivity for two days in Brazil’s Northeast.

Officials at Companhia Vale do Rio Doce (CVRD), an iron ore mining company, said today that its four employees were let go after talks between the Indians and the Funai (National Indian Foundation), which deal with Indian matters.

The Indians had blocked the Carajás railroad in the state of Maranhão, demanding that the National Health Foundation (Fundação Nacional de Saúde) (Funasa) provide them with better healthcare.

This is not the first time in Brazil that Indian group take hostages to make a point. As recently as December, they blocked another CVRD railway line, but withdrew after successful negotiations.

The Carajás railroad is named after the world’s largest iron ore reserve area. It is owned by the CVRD, which is Brazil’s second biggest company, after Petrobras.

It is the world’s fourth biggest mining company and the world’s biggest exporter of iron ore. CVRD is worth an estimated US$ 20 billion, and owns some 9,000 kilometers of railroad tracks and ten port terminals in Brazil.

Funasa says that it joined forces with the Funai sending representatives to deal with the Indians. Funasa also added that it is doing everything it can to meet the Indians demands regarding healthcare.

ABr

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil Loses Millions of Tons of Grains Due to Errors

Between 1996 and 2000 Brazil failed to harvest around 28 million tons of grains, ...

Day Care Center in Bahia, Brazil

In 3 years, Brazil Has Denied 1.5 million Children the Right to Life

Together with the other UN member-nations, Brazil committed itself to fulfill eight Millennium Development ...

Brazil: 3000 March on Brasí­lia Demanding Better Wages

About three thousand Brazilian workers are participating in the National Minimum Wage March.organized by ...

Brazil to Top US$ 117 Billion in Exports This Year

According to Brazil’s Minister of Development, Industry and Foreign Trade, Luiz Fernando Furlan, Brazilian ...

Will Brazil Ever Put and End to the Slavery and Genocide of Its Indians?

The genocide that occurs in a continuous and silent manner in Mato Grosso do ...

Brazil vs. NYT: The Autopsy of a Hangover

It became obvious that Brazil’s Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, the charismatic labor leader ...

Brazil and LatAm Don’t Lack Democracy but Government Quality, Says Global Forum

The continuation of economic growth in Latin America, the challenges that must be met, ...

Brazil Gets Import Fever. Trade Balance Surplus Falls by 70%

Brazil's trade balance surplus – the difference between exports and imports – reached US$ ...

Brazil Drafts China and Mercosur into War on Piracy

Approximately 75% of the pirated items consumed in Brazil come from abroad, informed the ...

Brazilian Feisty Gol Flies Daily to Panama

Brazilian Airline carrier Gol announced that it is starting to operate daily flights between ...