Brazil prepares 'to confront' gold miners invading Yanomami lands

Operation against more than 20,000 wildcat miners is imminent, officials say, as anger mounts over humanitarian crisis in isolated Yanomami villages on the country's largest Indigenous reservation.

Military is needed to drive out the miners, who are well-armed and have helicopters, says Defence Minister Jose Mucio.
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Military is needed to drive out the miners, who are well-armed and have helicopters, says Defence Minister Jose Mucio.

Brazil is preparing a task force of armed forces, police and government agencies to expel illegal gold miners who invaded the Yanomami Indigenous reservation, officials said.

Defence Minister Jose Mucio said on Tuesday the military is needed to drive out the miners, who are well-armed and have helicopters.

"We will soon confront them. We need to root out this evil," Mucio said in an interview with Band TV.

With army troops on the ground, the navy will patrol rivers and confiscate miners' boats and dredges while the air force will control the airspace and force suspicious planes to land, he said.

Joenia Wapichana, who in a few days will become the first Indigenous person to head the government's Indigenous affairs agency, Funai, said President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva has pledged to end illegal mining on protected reservation lands.

Speaking to journalists on the Amazon-based journalism platform SumaUma, Wapichana said she could not give details of the imminent operation in order to not alert the miners who have invaded the Yanomami territory.

"We have to let the police forces organise the operation in secret; the message from President Lula is that it will happen soon and cannot delay long," she said.

Wapichana said the task force, as in past offensives against illegal miners, will involve the Federal Police, environmental protection agency Ibama, Funai and several ministries, as well as the military.

More than 20,000 wildcat miners are blamed for bringing disease, violence and hunger that have caused a humanitarian crisis for isolated Yanomami villages on Brazil's largest Indigenous reservation, on the border with Venezuela.

READ MORE: Dozens of Yanomami children hospitalised in Brazil

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Yanomami Indigenous people eat donated food at the street in Boa Vista, Roraima state.

Deaths among 28,000 Yanomami

The miners have polluted waters with mercury used to separate metal from ore and earth.

They fly supply planes to clandestine airstrips in the jungle and use the rivers to take heavier machinery and fuel to their prospects, which are muddy ponds where they dredge for gold in forest clearings.

Medical studies show that the mercury used by the miners has killed the fish and contaminated the water that the Yanomami rely on.

The miners are increasingly associated with well-armed gangs that have terrorised Indigenous communities that for the first time cannot feed themselves, resulting in widespread malnutrition and deaths among the 28,000 Yanomami.

Lula last week declared a medical emergency in the Yanomami territory. 

On Monday, his government ordered a no-fly airspace over the reservation and steps to block river traffic heading to gold prospects.

Wapichana said the government would move against the organised crime and financial groups that supply and fund the illegal mining and launder the gold.

Lula's right-wing predecessor, Jair Bolsonaro, advocated mining on protected Indigenous lands, and his government turned a blind eye to invasions of Indigenous reservations by wildcat miners and illegal loggers.

"We are in a new era," Wapichana said. Those responsible for the humanitarian crisis the Yanomami are suffering will be punished for negligence, she said, and perhaps for committing genocide.

READ MORE: Brazil official seeks eviction of armed gold miners from Yanomami region

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