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Brazil’s Supreme Court Rules Government Must Protect Tribes from Covid-19

RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL – (Reuters) Brazil’s Supreme Court (STF) ruled on Wednesday, August 5th, that President Jair Bolsonaro’s government must adopt measures to stop the spread of the novel coronavirus to the country’s vulnerable indigenous communities.

Nine of the eleven Justices (two did not take part in the decision) confirmed a temporary order issued on July 8th by Justice Luis Roberto Barroso, and voted to give the government 30 days to draw up a plan to reduce the threat to indigenous people from COVID-19, which could wipe out some tribes.

Measures should include sanitary barriers to stop outsiders entering protected tribal lands and the isolation of invaders, but the court stopped short of ordering the immediate expulsion of illegal loggers and miners that indigenous leaders say are spreading the virus.

Brazil’s Supreme Court ruled on Wednesday that President Jair Bolsonaro’s government must adopt measures to stop the spread of novel coronavirus to the country’s vulnerable indigenous communities.
The STF ruled on Wednesday that President Bolsonaro’s government must adopt measures to stop the spread of the novel coronavirus into the country’s vulnerable indigenous communities. (Photo internet reproduction)

The action was sought by Brazil’s main indigenous umbrella organization APIB, backed by six opposition political parties that have criticized Bolsonaro for denying the gravity of the second worst coronavirus outbreak outside the United States.

According to APIB, 631 indigenous people have died from COVID-19 and 22,325 cases have been confirmed among Brazil’s 850,000 indigenous people. Half of Brazil’s 300 indigenous tribes have confirmed infections.

The pandemic endangers indigenous communities with no access to healthcare in remote parts of the Amazon, and whose communal living under large dwellings renders social distancing impossible.

Tribes face the loss of cultural traditions with the death of their elders stricken by the virus.

On Wednesday, Chief Aritana Yawalapiti, one of Brazil’s most influential indigenous leaders, who led the people of Upper Xingu in central Brazil and helped create an indigenous park there, died from COVID-19 aged 71.

Source: Reuters

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