SAO PAULO (Reuters) -Brazil’s federal police said on Friday they had launched a fresh operation to fight wildcat mining in the Yanomami indigenous territory amid a humanitarian crisis blamed on illegal gold miners in the region.
The police operation adds to enforcement raids launched earlier this week by Brazil’s environmental and indigenous agencies to expel thousands of wildcat miners from the country’s largest indigenous reservation.
Police said they would try and destroy machinery used by illegal miners as part of the first phase of the operation, joining efforts with environmental agency Ibama, indigenous agency Funai, the National Force and the Defense Ministry.
“The main focus of the operation is fully removing non-indigenous people from the Yanomami territory,” the head of the federal police environment department, Humberto Freire, said in a statement.
More than 20,000 miners invaded the reservation in northern Brazil, bringing disease, sexual abuse and armed violence that has terrified the Yanomamis, estimated to be about 28,000 in number, and led to severe malnutrition and deaths.
President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva’s government earlier this year declared a medical emergency for the Yanomamis and said it would have zero tolerance for mining on indigenous reservation land protected by Brazil’s Constitution.
Police said the final goal of their latest operation would be to “completely eradicate illegal mining” in the territory while protecting the Yanomamis.
(Reporting by Gabriel Araujo; Editing by Steven Grattan)