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The Kayapo & REsistance l
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2 Kayapó: History of Encroachment BakairíYanomami Kayapó
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3 Penetration of Kayapó Territory 1800s rubber boom 1900-50: ½ Kayapó died of diseases 1970s highways & settlement 1980s mega-development projects Dams, mining, lumbering, ranching, agribusinesses Kayapó rights to resources were not recognized
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4 600 mi. Kayapo Reserve Mine Xikrin
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5 Damn Dams! 1975: ELECTRONORTE surveyed Amazon for hydroelectric potential 1980 planned 6 dams on Xingu, 1 on Iriri rivers Tucuruí dam, built by Electronorte in the 1980s, displaced 40,000 people and pushed them deeper into poverty Submerged rotting vegetation from the dam now contributes one-sixth of Brazil's total greenhouse gas emissions
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6 Tucuruí Dam
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7 Kayapó: Out of the Forest Illustrates Kayapó resistance and world-wide protest over the dam projects
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8 “Out of the Forest” 1989 Organized resistance of Kayapó to building of hydroelectric dams Was a turning point Unprecedented: formed alliance among 28 nations, with 3000 people—led by Paikan Traditional enemies Many had never left villages 600 traveled 400 mi. up Xingu to Altamira Drew on tradition of militancy Guerrilla theater Sophisticated organization & use of technology
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9 1989: 2 Kayapó leaders & anthropolgist Darrell Posey went to Washington to lobby against the dams On return to Brazil, were arrested Appeared in court in ceremonial dress, judge ordered to dress in shirt & pants “This is the way we dress for great solemnities” International protest led World Bank to suspend loans for the dams in the 1990s
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10 The Belo Monte Dam Complex Today Brazil's electric company, Electronorte, is moving ahead with plans to build the Belo Monte Dam, one of the world’s three largest dams, with a capacity of equivalent to 8 nuclear plants The cost of the dam is $3.8 billion and bids for the dam privatized
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11 Who Benefits? G.E., Westinghouse supplied turbines, generators Aluminum smelters (Alcoa, Shell), mines, MNCs are primary energy consumers Alcoa aluminum foundry will use most of the energy to produce 800,000 tons of aluminum per year
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12 Impact The Belo Monte reservoir will flood 400 square kilometers of agricultural lands and forest and will directly impact the reserve of indigenous people & part of the city of Altamira Thousands of families will be relocated, including 9 indigenous nations With the Altamira reservoir, it will flood 6140 km including the Xingu Reservation Altamira will produce methane emissions that contribute to global warming
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13 What is the Current Status? On May 30, 2003, a court order put a stop to work on the Belo Monte project due to concerns about its impact on the environment In 2005, the national congress rapidly approved the project President Lula da Silva presented a bill that would reduce indigenous reserves by 1/3 of their present area
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14 Brazilian Government’s Assumptions “Progress” – New sources of energy Economic development for profit Indians seen as “primitive,” obstacles to development (unilineal evolution) FUNAI policy: assimilation, a tool for liberating Indigenous lands for whites
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15 The Brazilian government considers indigenous peoples an obstacle to development
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16 Kayapó View of Development They were never consulted, treated like children Lack interest in profit Lack concept of land as commodity Land is the condition for their continued survival
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17 Rainforest Destruction Note the contrast between indigenous resource management & outsiders Amazon rainforest = 40% world’s forests 25% is now gone Irreversible changes to ecology & climate
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18 What will be left of the Xingu river for the people of Xingu? --Dema
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