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.

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, 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.’