Thursday, 16 Jan 2025

Indigenous leaders express frustration at military in search for two men in Brazil

Indigenous leaders express frustration at military in search for two men in Brazil


Indigenous leaders express frustration at military in search for two men in Brazil
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Indigenous leaders in the area where a British journalist and Brazilian explorer went missing last Sunday have expressed increasing frustration at the lack of coordination in the search for the two men.

Indigenous expert Bruno Pereira and Dom Phillips, a longtime contributor to the Guardian, were last seen on Sunday morning while traveling by boat on the Itaquaí River in the western Amazon.

They disappeared at the end of a reporting trip but the search was slow to get going and Indigenous leaders criticised the lack of coordination between the different groups sent to the region, including the army, navy and federal police.

At least 50 locals on three boats have been scouring the river and its tributaries looking for signs of the two men or the boat in which they were travelling.

The military, Marubo said, should be coordinating the search and using the Indigenous guides strategically.

Police so far have arrested one man who was seen threatening Phillips and Pereira the day before they vanished. Amarildo da Costa de Oliveira was detained and his boat, on which traces of blood were found, was seized.

However, police have not yet linked him to the disappearance.

They sent the human material and blood for forensic testing and took DNA samples from the families of both Phillips and Pereira.

Orlando Possuelo, an Indigenous expert involved in the search operations, was pessimistic about finding the men alive but insists the efforts must continue.

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