press release, August 2000
World Bank Breaks Promise To Uncontacted Awá Indians
Brazil has violated its own constitution and the World Bank has flouted its Operational Directive by failing to
demarcate Awá Indian territory – although funds were made available 18 years ago to do so. This has lead to the deaths
of unknown numbers of uncontacted Awá and the destruction of their land. The demarcation has been blocked largely by
businessmen and politicians who have large landholdings on Awá land.
Survival has just learned that the money for the Awá demarcation expired on the 30th June 2000, eighteen years after it
was given to Brazil as part of a World Bank loan for the development of the Carajás mining project. A condition of this
loan was that all Indian territories should be demarcated by the Brazilian authorities. However, the Awá area still has
not been demarcated and this hunter gatherer tribe are facing increasing invasion of their land by settlers, ranchers
and loggers, making them acutely vulnerable to disease and violence.
Despite having failed to ensure that the Brazilian authorities and mining company CVRD adhered to the conditions of the
Carajás Project loan and agreement, the World Bank is preparing to make further loans to the area.
The Awá people are one of the few nomadic hunter gatherer peoples in Brazil. In 1950 their population was estimated at
800. Today they number less than 400, of whom about 150 are uncontacted. Living in mobile groups within the Amazon
forest, they hunt game such as tapir and monkeys and gather fruit and nuts. Most of the Awá who have been contacted and
live in villages are the survivors of brutal massacres. Attacks on groups of nomadic Awá are common and these survivors
relate how Awá have been killed at gunpoint or deliberately poisoned by ranchers and loggers.
The World Bank's Operational Directive on indigenous peoples (para. 15c) clearly states that recognition of indigenous
peoples' land tenure or ownership rights is a fundamental prerequisite in any project implementation where indigenous
peoples are involved. The World Bank is currently revising its Indigenous Peoples Policy. Worryingly, a leaked copy
suggests that the new policy will be substantially weaker.
Survival's director general, Stephen Corry, said, 'It is scandalous that today, as Brazil celebrates the 500th
anniversary of the arrival of the Portuguese, the Awá continue to be decimated by the same abuses they have faced for
five centuries. In our opinion, if action is not taken urgently, the Awá's survival as a people is in doubt.'