Brazil launches high-risk expedition to protect isolated tribe
Team sponsored by Funai is searching for the indigenous Korubo community, saying move is necessary to avoid bloodshed
Associated Press in Brasília
Thu 7 Mar 2019 10.55 EST
Brazils agency for indigenous peoples has sent off a rare and high-risk expedition, hoping to contact a small, isolated group in the Amazon and reunite its members with some of their relatives, saying the move is necessary to avoid bloodshed in an area near the border with Peru.
A team of nearly two dozen sponsored by the Funai agency headed up the Coari river over the weekend looking for the group of at least 22 people who are members of the widespread Korubo indigenous community and live in the Javari valley, in the northern state of Amazonas. Brazils army, federal police and health ministry are backing the initiative, which could take weeks.
The last time Funai organized such a big expedition was in 1996, also in that region. The Javari valley, an area of more than 8m hectares (nearly 31,000 sq miles), or bigger than Hungary, is home to the biggest concentration of isolated indigenous peoples in Brazil, amounting to at least 11 groups.
The initiative is the agencys first major operation during the administration of President Jair Bolsonaro, a far-right former army captain who pledged to stop demarcation of indigenous lands and allow miners to operate in their territory.
More:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/mar/07/brazil-high-risk-expedition-korubo-indigenous-funai
After addressing the unforgivable invasion, rape and vicious assault upon the indigenous people who've lived in this area peacefully for thousands of years, it's necessary to be aware of what the destruction of the wildly diminished remnants of the lungs of the world, the tropical rain forest.