São Joaquim de Bicas (Brazil) (AFP) - In her 88 years, Antonia Alves has seen much hardship as a member of Brazil's indigenous community, whose people have often been driven from their ancestral lands over conflicts with farmers and loggers.
Until a few
days ago, she had never seen an entire river die right before her eyes.
This is the
unthinkable ecological nightmare her people are facing, however, after a dam
storing mining waste collapsed in Minas Gerais state in southeast Brazil,
engulfing the village of Brumadinho, where 110 people have been confirmed dead.
Another 238
unfortunates are still missing, hopes of their recovery all but gone in the
toxic wave of sludge that engulfed them, suffocating everything in its path to
the Paraopeba river.
The brown
waters, which reek of dead fish, reached as far as Nao Xoha, a village
sheltered by the Atlantic rainforest 14 miles (22 kilometers) from the burst
dam.
Alves and
her small branch of the Pataxo Ha-Ha-Hae indigenous people settled in the
forest a year and a half ago, relocating from their strife-torn ancestral lands
in the north to live in nature according to their customs.
"It is
very sad because we lived off the river," said Alves, her face lined by
age and sun, head crowned with a band of white and purple feathers.
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A member of the Pataxo Ha-ha-hae community carrying a cooking pan along a path through the forest (AFP Photo/Mauro Pimentel) |
"We
bathed there, took our water from it, washed our clothes there and fished from
it. Indians live from fishing and hunting."
Alves'
neighbor Jocelia Josi describes the stench as she pulled dead fish from what
formerly an important tributary of the Sao Francisco, the longest
entirely-Brazilian river.
'Village
of resistance'
"Now
we don't have any more food from there," said the 46-year-old, who is
waiting for her daughter and three-month-old grandson to return from the state
capital Belo Horizonte, where they were evacuated after the disaster.
It is
lunchtime in Nao Xoha -- which means "warrior spirit" in the
community's native tongue -- and Alves and her husband Gervasio, a serene elder
of 93, are waiting for their daughter to finish cooking outside their modest
hut.
But today
is no normal day. Nothing has been normal here since Dam Number 1, owned by
mining giant Vale, burst last Friday, dramatically changing the lives of the 27
families living in the village.
Nao Xoha
lacks its own medic, but a doctor has checked up on the 15 people who were not
evacuated, and volunteers have brought supplies to the community, which always
lacked electricity and now has no water.
To reach the village, visitors have to cross a railway line where cargo trains pass and then enter the verdant Atlantic rainforest.
To reach the village, visitors have to cross a railway line where cargo trains pass and then enter the verdant Atlantic rainforest.
The dam
breach unleashed a torrent of almost 13 million cubic tons of mud that swept
across the countryside before reaching the river.
But its
impact spreads even further than the vast scar of mud that rescue services are
probing for the bodies of the missing.
The
government of Minas Gerais has warned that the metal-tainted waters present a
health risk and organizations like the WWF have said the environmental impact
will be felt for years to come.
"They
have taken away part of our reserve, killed a part of it, but we are a village
of resistance and we will get over this," said community leader Hayo
Pataxo Ha-ha-hae, who sported a head dress made of palm fronds.
"We
will carry on even if the river has died. Nature depends on us to preserve
it."
'Lack of
respect'
He had just
attended another meeting with FUNAI -- the Brazilian government body
responsible for indigenous peoples' interests -- and said it was too early to
determine what action the community would take against Vale.
He simply
insisted that his people would resist, and defend their traditional lifestyle,
just as they have for centuries.
"It shows a lack of respect towards us", said Tahh'a, a well-built watchman aged 55, his frown wrinkling the black paint on his face.
![]() |
A dead fish
in the waters of the Paraopeba river, near the town of Brumadinho where
a dam
full of mining waste collapsed on January 25 (AFP Photo/Mauro Pimentel)
|
"It shows a lack of respect towards us", said Tahh'a, a well-built watchman aged 55, his frown wrinkling the black paint on his face.
"The
biggest loss for us is the fish, because we are not permitted to hunt around
here," he said, holding a pointed stick in his hand, a machete dangling from
his hip.
While the
full extent of the environmental impact remains unclear, the precedents are not
encouraging.
No one here
can forget the destruction of the Rio Doce river, also in Minas Gerais, which
was devastated by the collapse in 2015 of the Mariana dam, the biggest
environmental disaster in Brazilian history. That barrier was also jointly
owned by Vale.
"I
want to tell not only Vale, but also our leaders, to punish those guilty of
doing this to our indigenous nation, together with the farmers and the families
who lost people," said 29-year Hayo.
"How
many more people have to be killed before the justice department takes
notice?" he demanded.
"It is
very sad," added Alves. "When are they going to clean up the river? When
will there be fish in it again?"
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