Rondônia, Brazil

With worn single barrel shotguns slung over their shoulders, two Indigenous men tread quietly through the thick Amazon forest of their land, checking for illegal activity.

They say that since 2015, their territory – where they live with around 40 other fellow Karipuna in Brazil’s north-western state of Rondônia – has been increasingly targeted by illegal loggers and land grabbers.

The atmosphere is tense. In this unpoliced part of the Amazon, illegal extractive gangs that operate in the region are known to be armed and violent, usually connected to large, powerful criminal networks.

As they descend a hill, suddenly the forest opens up into a large clearing. It’s a scene of devastation – dozens of large trees have been cut down, undergrowth has been set on fire.

The tribesmen search the area for clues of who has been here and when. They find discarded food packaging. They say it must be from the loggers.

Increased violence

A spike in violence against Indigenous people and rural workers in the Brazilian Amazon has been accompanied by increasing deforestation in protected areas.

It comes as funding for Brazil’s indigenous agency, Funai, was cut by 44%, agency officials told Unearthed.

According to the Imazon institute, deforestation in Amazon conservation units rose 22% between August 2016 and July 2017.

Amid economic downturn, overall Amazon deforestation dropped 16% in the same period according to Brazil’s Programme for the Estimation of Deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon (Prodes), but only after growing by 27% and 24% two years previously.

Deforestation remains significantly above its 2012 low.

Meanwhile, the number of deaths from conflicts over land and resources stands at 64 from January until November 2017, compared to 61 in 2016, 49 occurring in the Amazon according to watchdog Comissão Pastoral da Terra (CPT).

There is hardly any productive land left, so the race for land is on, at any cost

Experts blame Brazil’s economic and political crises for violence and intrusions on protected lands. They say loggers and land grabbers are engaged in a violent scramble for land and resources, enabled by deep cuts to Indigenous and environmental budgets.

These groups are emboldened by a powerful farming lobby whose influence has grown over the last decade and especially since President Michel Temer took office in 2016.

Cleber Buzatto, executive secretary of Brazil’s Indigenous Missionary Council (Cimi), tells Unearthed: “The dominance of agribusiness in government, with the measures they are pushing, creates incentives and a sense of protection for those who commit these crimes.”

At a global summit in Bonn, Germany last week, international leaders agreed for the first time to create a platform for Indigenous people to participate in climate change talks.

Also at COP23, the UK government signed a £62m deal aimed at tackling deforestation in Latin America.

Karipuna children inside a house in Panorama village inside Indigenous territory. Photo: Tommaso Protti

Land grabbing

Unearthed visited the Karipuna Indigenous territory in Brazil’s Amazon state of Rondônia on the “arc of deforestation,” the agricultural frontier advancing into the forest.

Since 2015, tribespeople say their land is increasingly targeted by loggers and land grabbers.

“The invaders are marking their territory, they want to occupy and take our land,” says Adriano Karipuna, one of the tribal leaders as he patrols his land to check for illegal activity

Federal prosecutors began working on a criminal case in August involving the Karipuna’s land, after Adriano filed a complaint that he was receiving threats to kill him and his children.

Around 40 Karipuna tribespeople live on the 153,000 hectare territory demarcated by Brazil’s government in 1998. Most of the tribe died from diseases following contact with Amazon settlers in the 1970s.

“Given the small numbers, both from the cultural and physical point, this tribe is at risk of genocide if strong measures are not taken immediately to stop the invaders, warns Buzatto.

Cimi’s latest annual report noted invasions of Indigenous territories, stood at 59 in 2016 – up from 54 in 2015 – with 12 in Rondônia.

Buzatto believes 2017’s figures will likely be worse.