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New gold rush threatens indigenous havens in Brazil’s Amazon

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Pykany, Brazil – Indigenous chief Bepdjo Mekragnotire is once again preparing to lead a group of warriors to chase wildcat gold miners away from his people’s territory in Brazil’s Amazon rainforest. Wearing a red feather headdress, Bepdjo spoke of rising tensions with intruders in the Bau Indigenous Territory in Para state, four years after his people expelled almost 200 prospectors. “The miners are stubborn. They enter by any means. Because today the price of gold is very high,” Bepdjo, 45, said in Pykany, a village of his Kayapo people in a territory neighboring Bau. “We have to expel them, otherwise, they’ll just keep pushing in.” The price of gold — a safe-haven asset in troubled times — has hit a new era of record highs amid global instability. This is pushing wildcat miners into relatively untouched areas like Bau. In February, guns were briefly drawn on both sides when chief Bepdjo and a group of Kayapo warriors came across miners in a canoe. He said they kicked out 24 people.…

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