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Opinion
March 8, 2022
The climate “sofrência” era
Everyone will suffer the impacts caused by climate change, but some groups are more vulnerable and tend to be harder hit. It is up to all of us to act.
By
Brenda Brito
via
plenamata.eco
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Opinion
August 16, 2023
Mercury contamination: the slow and invisible death of indigenous peoples and riverside communities
Mercury is considered one of the most dangerous metals for human health and it is spreading throughout the Amazon in function of ‘development’ aimed at the exploitation of nature.
By
Raquel Tupinambá
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Opinion
January 11, 2022
Your vote is the most important action against the climate crisis
The 2022 elections will be key if we want a Brazil that values life, sustainability, and the proper management of the climate crisis in the years to come.
By
Brenda Brito
via
plenamata.eco
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Opinion
September 30, 2021
The mines are made of paper, but the destruction is real
A study on a new gold rush targeting the Amazon shows that much of the ore is extracted illegally, leaving a trail of deforestation and mercury contamination.
By
Raoni Rajão
and
Bruno Manzolli
via
plenamata.eco
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Stories
December 3, 2021
Every person in three indigenous Munduruku villages in Pará is contaminated by mercury from wildcat mining
Studies by Fiocruz show that 60% of the indigenous people of the Sawré Muybu Indigenous Land have this toxic metal in their bodies above the limit tolerated by the WHO. Mining in indigenous lands has grown by almost 500% in a decade.
By
Aldem Bourscheit
via
InfoAmazonia
and
plenamata.eco
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Stories
February 9, 2023
‘The fight goes on’: four indigenous leaders from Amazonia outline their expectations for the next four years
In a conversations with InfoAmazonia, Maial Kaiapó, Samela Sateré-Mawé, Júnior Hekurari Yanomami and Alessandra Korap Munduruku spoke about the historically important establishment of the Ministry of Indigenous Peoples, and the sense of relief following the dismantling of environmental policies.
By
Emily Costa
via
InfoAmazonia
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