No mining allowed in six new Indigenous reserves in Brazil

Brazilian President Lula Da Silva, Cacique Kayapó, Raoni Metuktire, and Minister of Environment and Climate Change Marina SilvaBrazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula Da Silva, Kayapó Chief, Raoni Metuktire, and Minister of Environment and Climate Change, Marina Silva. (Image by Palácio do Planalto, Flickr.)

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio ‘Lula’ Da Silva has issued a decree creating six new Indigenous reserves, most of them in the Amazon, that are off limits for mining. The move also restricts commercial farming and logging in such areas.

The new protected communities are Arara do Rio Amônia, located in the western state of Acre; Kariri-Xocó, in the eastern Alagoas state; Rio dos Índios, in Rio Grande do Sul state; Tremembé da Barra do Mundaú, in the northeastern Ceará state; Uneiuxi, in Amazonas state, and Avá-Canoeiro in Goiás state. Overall, they occupy an area of 6,200 sq. km.

“We are going to legalize the largest possible number of Indigenous lands, not only because it is their right, but because we want to reach zero deforestation by 2030,” Lula said during an event with First Nations leaders.

The president made the announcement together with Sônia Guajajara, the Minister of Indigenous Peoples. One year ago on the same stage, Da Silva promised he would create a portfolio to look after the interests of the country’s First Nations.

“What we want is that, at the end of our mandate, Brazilian Indigenous peoples are being respected and treated with all the dignity that every human being deserves,” he said.

Da Silva noted that native rights in Brazil suffered under the administration of Jair Bolsonaro, leading to a humanitarian crisis that left 33 million people starving to death.

“There is a lot to be fixed. We took over a country that has been dismantled,” he said.

Although the move was welcomed by Indigenous leaders, they noted that larger areas need to be protected.

Lula promised to continue the discussions around the rights of Indigenous peoples over their traditional territories. He said that those who argue that establishing reserves over 14% of the Brazilian territory is too much need to understand that First Nations owned 100% of the land since time immemorial and that they have the knowledge required to act decisively in the preservation of biodiversity.

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