Site icon Conservation news

Survival of Indigenous communities at risk as Amazon fire season advances

The Kayapó Xikrin people of the Northern Amazon were affected by 2019’s infamous Fire Day. Photo taken in August 2019. Credit: Emilio Chong/Land is Life.

The Kayapó Xikrin people of the Northern Amazon were affected by 2019’s infamous Fire Day. Photo taken in August 2019. Credit: Emilio Chong/Land is Life.

  • The number of major Amazon fires this year has more than doubled since August 13, with most of those fires being illegal. 674 major fires were detected between May 28 and September 2, with a sharp increase inside Indigenous territories in the last two weeks, raising concerns among Indigenous leaders.
  • Indigenous groups are being left to fight the fires on their own, without support from government institutions. IBAMA, Brazil’s environmental agency has been largely stripped of funds and lacks adequate equipment to fight the blazes, while the Army, sent to the Amazon in May, is reportedly failing to suppress most fires.
  • Combined with COVID-19, smoke from fires poses a serious threat to Indigenous health. Native peoples have been disproportionately affected by the pandemic, and have weaker immune systems for respiratory disease. A recent study shows that Indigenous hospitalizations for respiratory disease coincide with deforestation rates year-by-year.
  • Isolated Indigenous groups are especially under threat as fires put their food sources at risk. Experts say that isolated and uncontacted groups, to fend off hunger, are sighted more often roaming during Amazon fires, potentially risking exposure to Western diseases.
This recently deforested area, now ablaze, is near the border of the Kaxarari Indigenous Reserve, in Lábrea, Amazonas state, Brazil; 17 Aug, 2020. CREDIT: © Christian Braga / Greenpeace.

As the Amazon rainforest’s human-inflicted fire season advances — now counting nearly 700 major fires and half a million hectares  burned over the last three months — the risk to Indigenous territories is growing: 86% of major fires detected in Indigenous Territories this year happened in the last two weeks, according to satellite data analyzed by the Monitoring of the Andean Amazon Project (MAAP).

“Everyone is frightened and worried. Last year, the whole world watched as wildfires consumed the Amazon. This year, it’s looking even worse,” Sonia Guajajara, leader of the Brazil-based Association of Indigenous Peoples (APIB), told Mongabay.

Fifteen of the Brazilian Amazon’s 674 major fires detected this year between May 28 and September 2, have burned inside Indigenous territories, according to MAAP data, which counts major blazes and filters out smaller fires that may not have big consequences for the forest.

But even fires occurring outside of Indigenous territories have far-reaching consequences for Native peoples. The fires — following on the heels of the devastating COVID-19 pandemic that has claimed thousands of lives in Amazonia — produce heavy clouds of smoke that are disproportionately affecting Indigenous health. And for isolated Indigenous groups, fire is a direct threat to survival, wiping out their forest food sources, and in some cases, forcing them into contact with the modern world, and potentially, modern diseases to which they have little resistance.

Despite the rising wave of fires this year, Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro continues to slash funds from IBAMA, Brazil’s environmental agency, responsible for preventing and fighting fires and from ICMBio, the nation’s national park service. After a US $22 million budget cut, a further US $11 million was temporarily blocked last week, threatening to halt all agency operations to combat Amazon fires and deforestation. The decision to block funds was quickly reversed, possibly in response to the outcry from NGOs and the media.

Bolsonaro’s administration is openly pushing to allow mining and agribusiness within Indigenous reserves and conservations units, has green-lighted illegal farms on Indigenous lands, and has without evidence blamed Indigenous communities, environmental NGOs, firefighters and even Leonardo di Caprio for Amazon fires.

The Parabubure Indigenous Territory in the Brazilian State of Mato Grosso showing late August fire alerts. Screenshot of the Real-Time Fire Monitoring Map by the MAAP Initiative.

Fires burning in Indigenous territories

While many Amazon fires are set in unprotected areas, a few Indigenous territories in Brazil have seen out-of-control wildfires in the last couple weeks. Hardest hit are the Parque do Xingu and Parabubure Indigenous territories, which have seen four major blazes each, according to MAAP’s analysis.

In the Parabubure Indigenous Territory in the Brazilian State of Mato Grosso, major fires have burned at least 11,295 hectares (27,910 acres), an area twice the size of Manhattan Island in one week, threatening the Indigenous way of life, health and food security of its 3,819 residents in 48 villages.

“The fires are still going now, it’s out of control,” said Indiana Petsirei Ö Dumhiwe, an Indigenous leader who witnessed the wildfires last week; she is also a public servant at the National Indigenous Foundation (FUNAI), Brazil’s Indigenous affairs agency. “This is the first time a fire like this has happened here. The animals, the birds — we see them running away from the fire. It’s horrible. It affects our way of life and our survival.”

Some families came close to losing their homes as the flames came within meters of many villages, Dumhiwe told Mongabay. But despite the roaring fires, her people are on their own. “No one is helping us. There are only Indigenous people here working to put out the fire.”

The Karipuna Indigenous Territory in Brazil’s Rondônia state is obscured by smoke from surrounding fires. Residents report trouble breathing, sore eyes, and fatigue from breathing in the smoke. Image by André Karipuna.

Smoke harm from surrounding fires 

Significant fires in protected areas make up just 5.5% of this year’s total, as these forested areas traditionally function as a shield against deforestation and retain the natural humid characteristics of a fire-suppressing rainforest that other degraded parts of the Amazon have already lost.

“Historically, Indigenous territories work as a barrier of protection against the advance of deforestation and forest fires, and are vital to impeding total destruction of the environment,” says Guajajara.

But even inside Indigenous territories that are totally without fire, there are dangerous impacts. Dense smoke from neighboring areas is carried by the wind in thick, toxic clouds, impacting the health, subsistence livelihoods and survival of residents. Last year’s Amazon fires blackened the skies and blotted out the sun as far away as São Paulo, Brazil’s largest city more than 2,000 miles from the blazes. Conditions are as bad or worse in parts of the Amazon this year.

In satellite imagery, major fires are often seen outlining Indigenous territories — with the characteristic fishbone pattern of access roads and new deforestation standing out along with bright red fire alert hot spots. This contrasts sharply with the lush green forests seen inside the protected boundaries of Indigenous reserves. That juxtaposition is no coincidence: most Amazon fires in Brazil are intentionally set, often by land grabbers, at the forest edge as a way of clearing away the rainforest and converting the land to valuable pasture and croplands.

While there are no cases of major fires in Indigenous reserves in Brazil’s Rondônia state, hazardous smoke clouds from nearby fires are so intense that they are harming the health and livelihoods of Indigenous communities, that are also disproportionately affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. Outlined in green are the Karipuna (top) and Uru-Eu-Wau-Wau (bottom right) Indigenous territories. Screenshot of the Real-Time Fire Monitoring Map by the MAAP Initiative.

The Indigenous situation right now is not unlike that of having your home right next to a neighbor’s house that is ablaze. Bitate Uru Eu Wau Wau lives in a small Indigenous village called Jamari in the heart of the Amazon rainforest, which is surrounded by a dark green sea of trees in the Brazilian state of Rondônia. MAAP has not detected any major fires in his territory. But the lands encircling his Indigenous green island are on fire.

For the last weeks, the fresh air of the forest has been supplanted by smoke from major blazes burning near the Uru-Eu-Wau-Wau Territory, harming the health of elderly people amid the COVID-19 pandemic that has already killed many across the Amazon basin.

“The fire is surrounding our land, and it’s only going to get worse. There are still months of fires ahead of us. You wake up in the morning and see clouds of smoke on the horizon,” Bitate Uru Eu Wau Wau told Mongabay. He is the coordinator of the Japaú Association that represents his people. “It has been a huge concern, especially since we have elderly people here with breathing difficulties. Indigenous people already have weaker immune systems. Add COVID and the smoke, and we’re even more vulnerable.”

After a major invasion by land grabbers on January 12, 2019, Uru-eu-wau-wau men organized regular patrols. They’re determined to defend their ancestral territory, but can’t easily prevent the intrusion of Amazon fire season smoke or COVID-19. Image by Divulgação Kanindé.

On days with heavy smoke, Bitate recounts, an elder in his village can hardly breathe. “We keep a close eye on her in case the situation comes to worst.” These elders — the keepers of Indigenous culture in the Amazon — are especially valuable to their ethnic groups; their loss also brings the loss of long kept traditions and records handed down orally over the centuries.

Almost 80% of the total major fires this year are linked to recent deforestation, MAAP data shows, and these fires account for 80% of the particulate matter now contaminating thousands of Amazonian lungs.

From 2015 to 2019, the number of Indigenous people over 50 hospitalized with breathing difficulties doubled, according to a study by the Socio-environmental Institute (ISA), a Brazilian nonprofit.

There is a strong correlation between deforestation, air pollution from fires and hospitalizations of Indigenous people over 50, according to a new study by INPE (the Brazilian Space Agency) and the Brazilian NGO Socioenvironmental Institute. The top chart shows hospitalizations per thousand Indigenous people during the fire season September-October 2010-2019. The lower chart graphs deforestation and hospitalizations over the same years. Credit: ISA.

“After childbirth and pregnancy issues, respiratory issues are the leading cause for hospitalization among Indigenous people. With COVID-19 [rampant] this year, vulnerability will increase even more. They are the guardians of the forest, and are being neglected,” said Alana Almeida, an ecologist at INPE, the Brazilian National Institute for Space Research and a lead study author.

Data for 2020 is not yet available, but researchers fear that the COVID-19 pandemic, combined with the continued increase in fires and deforestation, will result in a far worse health crisis than last year, likely overwhelming the region’s already fragile public health system, already seriously undermined since Jair Bolsonaro came to power in January 2019.

“The data shows total abandon[ment] by the government in dealing with Indigenous issues and the complete inefficiency in combatting fires and deforestation,” Almeida said.

A map of the approximate locations of isolated Indigenous groups. There is significant overlap where this year’s Amazon fires are located. Image by the Amazon Conservation Team.

Isolated Indigenous groups at great risk

For isolated and uncontacted Indigenous groups — of which there are dozens still in the Amazon — smoke is the least of their problems. Fire in the rainforest is threatening the very survival of these hunter gatherer groups, according to a study published by the Indigenous-led organization Land is Life. Amazon fires kill plant and animal life that these roving bands depend on to survive, and without enough food, they may be forced to come into contact with Western society, risking exposure and death from disease.

“All of the isolated peoples are under threat by the fire,” said Atenor Vaz, an expert in isolated Indigenous groups who set up the Brazilian institutional protocols for isolated groups in the early 1990s, and the study’s lead author. “Whenever there are fires, there are more sightings of [roaming] isolated groups on river banks and close to other Indigenous villages.”

These Amazon isolated Indigenous groups are between a rock and a hard place, says Vaz. “They have been practicing social isolation for decades in order to prevent disease, much like what we are doing now with the COVID-19 pandemic,” he concludes. But “Their culture is entirely based on the forest. If it catches on fire, there is no one to help — there’s no salary, no fridge. Food sovereignty is drastically reduced.” Hungry and seeking food, the fire and smoke drives them from the forest, where the pandemic and other diseases await.

Banner image: The Kayapó Xikrin people of the Northern Amazon were affected by 2019’s infamous Fire Day. Researchers believe that the intense fires then were responsible for many of the hospitalizations due to respiratory problems last year. Photo taken in August 2019. Credit: Emilio Chong/Land is Life.

FEEDBACK: Use this form to send a message to the author of this post. If you want to post a public comment, you can do that at the bottom of the page.

Exit mobile version