Brazil: 439,000 signature petition to be handed in to Congress for Yanomami Covid campaign

December 2, 2020

Drawings of the Yanomami spirit beings known as xapiri were projected onto Brazil’s Congress buildings, in a historic first. © Adriano Machado/ISA

This page was created in 2020 and may contain language which is now outdated.

UPDATE December 4: *The petition was handed over during an online ceremony yesterday attended by Dario Yanomami, Mauricio Ye’kwana, Congresswoman Joenia Wapichana and others.

To mark the occasion, stunning Yanomami paintings of the xapiri – spirit beings – were projected onto Brazil’s Congress: photos below.

December 2:

A 439,000 signature petition calling on the Brazilian government to prevent the genocide of the Yanomami people will be handed in to Congress in Brasilia on Thursday December 3.

When: December 3
8am EST / 10am BRT / 1pm GMT: Petition hand-in to Federal deputies (online)
5pm EST / 7pm BRT / 10pm GMT: Projections of Yanomami images on Brazilian Congress

The “MinersOutCovidOut” petition calls for the immediate expulsion of 20,000 illegal miners from inside the Yanomami Indigenous Territory. The miners have brought in outside diseases such as Covid-19 and malaria, and their prospecting has polluted the rivers.

Drawings of the Yanomami spirit beings known as xapiri were projected onto Brazil’s Congress buildings, in a historic first. © Adriano Machado/ISA

The original target for the petition was 100,000 signatures.

Covid-19 is now rampant across the Yanomami Territory, and from August to October alone, confirmed cases jumped from 335 to 1,202. Lack of testing means the real number of cases is probably far higher.

Jair Bolsonaro’s government backs the miners. Its actions have seriously hampered efforts to prevent Covid-19 spreading inside Indigenous territories. Little has been done to remove the miners, whose numbers have increased dramatically in recent years.

Joenia Wapichana, Brazil’s first Indigenous congresswoman, will receive the petition virtually from Yanomami and Ye’kwana leaders. Other Indigenous representatives will also be present in the online event.

On the day of the hand-in, in a historic first, a campaign message and Yanomami paintings will be projected on to the Congress building.

The hand-in comes after the publication of an explosive new report revealing the humanitarian crisis unfolding in the Yanomami Territory. Dario Yanomami, campaign spokesperson and Vice President of Hutukara (an organization that represents Yanomami and Ye’kwana people) referred to it as a “historic document [showing] how the disease spread in our territory”.

A message of thanks from Dario Yanomami to everyone who signed the petition. © Dario Yanomami/ISA

Dario said: “We want to deliver this document to the Brazilian authorities. It’s an instrument to denounce the problems with the invasion of miners, the contamination of the environment including our rivers, and infection from diseases, like this xawara [epidemic], which are killing a lot of people.”

Drawings of the Yanomami spirit beings known as xapiri were projected onto Brazil’s Congress buildings, in a historic first. © Adriano Machado/ISA

Fiona Watson, Survival’s Research and Advocacy director who has worked with the Yanomami for three decades, said today: “The government is rapidly creating conditions for another genocide of the Yanomami people. If the authorities don’t act now to expel the miners and stop the spread of coronavirus and malaria, the Yanomami, the Ye’kwana and several highly vulnerable uncontacted communities in the territory will see their lives shattered beyond repair. Public concern is mounting and the government must be held to account before it’s too late.”

The campaign was launched in June 2020 by several Yanomami and Ye’kwana associations: the Yanomami and Ye’kwana Leadership Forum, Hutukara Yanomami Association (HAY), Wanasseduume Ye’kwana Association (SEDUUME), Kumirayoma Yanomami Women’s Association (AMYK) Texoli Ninam Association of Roraima State (TANER) and the Yanomami Association of the River Cauaburis and Affluents (AYRCA).

It is supported by various organizations worldwide, including Survival: APIB (Coalition of Indigenous Organizations of Brazil), COIAB (Coordinating Body of Indigenous Organizations of the Brazilian Amazon), ISA (Instituto Socioambiental), Survival International, Greenpeace Brasil, Conectas Direitos Humanos, Amnesty International Brazil, Rede de Cooperação Amazônica (RCA), Instituto Igarapé, Rainforest Foundation US and Rainforest Foundation Norway and Amazon Watch.

Drawings of the Yanomami spirit beings known as xapiri were projected onto Brazil’s Congress buildings, in a historic first. © Adriano Machado/ISA

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