Expert who devoted his life to protecting isolated Amazon tribes killed by tribesman’s arrow
Brasilia - A top expert on isolated Amazon
tribes in Brazil was killed by an arrow that struck him in the chest as he
approached an indigenous group, friends and a police witness said on Thursday.
Rieli Franciscato, 56, had spent his
career as an official in the government's indigenous affairs agency Funai,
working to set up reservations to protect Brazil's tribes.
On Wednesday, as he moved close to a
hitherto uncontacted indigenous group, he was hit by an arrow above the heart in
the forest near the Uru Eu Wau Wau reservation in the western Brazilian state of
Rondonia near the border with Bolivia.
"He cried out, pulled the arrow from
his chest, ran 50 meters and collapsed, lifeless," a policeman who accompanied
the expedition said in an audio posted on social media.
The Kanindé Ethno-Environmental Defense
Association he helped found in the 1980s said the indigenous group had no ability
to distinguish between a friend or a foe from the outside world.
His death comes at a time when indigenous
people in Brazil are under increasing threat from invasions by illegal land
grabbers, loggers and gold miners, emboldened by the policies of far-right
President Jair Bolsonaro who wants to develop the Amazon and reduce the size of
indigenous reservations.
"We are feeling bewildered by so many
deaths in this Brazil that no longer respects indigenous rights," said
Ivanei de Cardozo, Franciscato's friend and co-founder of the Kanindé
association.
The leading authority on Brazil's
remaining isolated tribes and a former head of Funai, Sydney Possuelo, said
Bolsonaro had kept his campaign promise to destroy the agency that is meant to
defend rights of indigenous people.
Possuelo said the government had defunded
Funai and left itwithout staff needed for security at its isolated posts just
as increasing land invasions increase the risk of violent clashes.
Brazil's presidency did not immediately
respond to a request for comment. Bolsonaro has repeatedly proposed the need to
integrate the indigenous, who he has described as living "like cave
men," into broader Brazilian society.
"Rieli was a calm, methodical, soft-spoken man who knew the dangers very well, but he was alone and so he went to ask the police to accompany him," Possuelo said. The presence of police, Possuelo explained, might have triggered the attack.
https://www.iol.co.za/news/world/expert-who-devoted-his-life-to-protecting-isolated-amazon-tribes-killed-by-tribesmans-arrow-bd68d446-a0cb-54e1-ab9c-9084c0d87d20
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