Amazon Mega-Dams Stoke New Wave of Indian Protests
Kayapó Indians are to hold a protest against a huge
hydro-electric dam planned for Brazil’s Xingu River, one
of the Amazon’s main tributaries.
The week-long protest will start on 28 October and take place in the Kayapó community of Piaraçu. At least 200 Indians are expected to gather. Representatives from Brazil’s Ministry of Mines and Energy, and the Ministry of the Environment, have been invited there to talk with the Indians.
The
Kayapó and other indigenous peoples oppose the dam (known
as Belo Monte), saying they have not been properly consulted
about it and have not been informed of its true impacts on
their lands.
The dam will divert more than 80% of the
flow of the Xingu River, and have a major impact on fish
stocks and forests along a 100 km stretch of the river
inhabited by indigenous peoples. Survival has protested to
the government about the project.
The Kayapó are
furious with Edison Lobão, the Minister of Mines and
Energy, who recently stated that ‘demoniac forces’ were
preventing the construction of large hydro-electric dams in
Brazil. Kayapó leader Megaron Txucarramae said, ‘These
words are very ugly and are offensive to us and to those who
defend nature.’
Belo Monte is one of the largest
infrastructure projects in the government’s Accelerated
Growth Programme. In 1989 the Kayapó organised a massive
protest against a series of dams planned for the Xingu
River. They successfully lobbied the World Bank to pull out
of funding the project, which was then shelved.
Dams
planned for other Amazon rivers are also the target of
indigenous protests. A year ago, the Enawene Nawe tribe
ransacked a dam building site in a bid to stop dozens of
dams planned for the Juruena river. The Indians say the dams
will ruin the fishing on which they depend.
In the
western Amazon, the Santo Antônio dam, part of a complex of
dams being built on the Madeira River, will flood the land
of at least five groups of uncontacted Indians. One group is
thought to live only 14 kilometres from the main dam
construction site.
In a letter to President Lula, the
Kayapó explained their position: ‘We don’t want this
dam to destroy the ecosystems and the biodiversity that we
have taken care of for millenia and which we can still
preserve. Mr. President, our cry is for studies that are
well-done and which seek to discuss with indigenous peoples
this great ecological cradle of our ancestors... We want to
participate in this process without being treated as evil
demons who hold back the country's evolution.’
Survival’s Director Stephen Corry
said today, ‘The real impact of the dams has been hidden.
If they go ahead they will destroy the lives, land and
livelihoods of many tribes. No amount of compensation can
ever make up for damage on this scale, that will wreck
peoples’ lives and independence.’
To read this
story online: http://www.survivalinternational.org/news/5162
ENDS