Another
nail in the coffin of humanity
'The
Last Bit of Paradise': Giant Dam Threatens Brazilian Rainforest
The construction of a giant dam in the Amazon region of Brazil is threatening parts of the world's largest rainforest. But the indigenous tribes living here are keeping quiet in return for millions of dollars in promises.
By
Jonathan Stock in Altamira, Brazil
1
Febraury, 2013
They
search for dead meat, and rummage through the trash. They come from
the forest and live on the city's waste. They're called "urubus"
in northern Brazil, black vultures with curved beaks and lizard-like
heads.
The
old people say the birds bring bad luck. There are now thousands in
the city of Altamira, more than ever before. They blacken the sky
when seen from a distance, and at closer range their silence is
unsettling. Black vultures, lacking the vocal organ found in birds,
the syrinx, rarely make any noise at all.
"The
urubus," says Bishop Erwin Kräutler, "are an unmistakable
sign that the city is in chaos." Kräutler, a native Austrian,
is the bishop of one of the world's large prelatures, which is larger
than Germany. He talks about chaos, speaking into every camera that's
pointed at him, and he speaks loudly -- too loudly for the big
landowners, the corporations and the government. His enemies have
placed a bounty on the bishop's head for the equivalent of almost
€400,000 ($543,000), and even the largest newspaper in northern
Brazil wrote that it was time to "eliminate" him.
Bishop
Kräutler is now 73. He's been living in Altamira, on the edge of the
rainforest and in the middle of the Amazon region, for almost 50
years. For the last 30 years, he has been fighting the construction
of the dam directly adjacent to the city, a project that is
financially lucrative for many in the area.
He
and his friends from environmental organizations advise the victims,
file lawsuits against government agencies and plan rallies. He has
spoken with prosecutors and the country's supreme court, has met with
the president twice and was awarded the Alternative Nobel Prize, but
all to little avail.
'Beautiful
Mountain'
Altamira's
population is expected to reach 300,000 soon, up from only 100,000
not too long ago. The developers call the dam Belo Monte, or
"beautiful mountain," while the dam's opponents call it
Belo Monte de Merde, or "beautiful mountain of shit." The
dam attracts workers, causing the city and its garbage dumps to grow,
which in turn attracts black vultures from the jungle.
Kräutler's
fight is a struggle against the biggest construction site in the
largest rainforest on earth. The first of 24 turbines is expected to
be up and running in 2015. Starting in 2019, the dam will have as
much generating capacity as 11 nuclear power plants. To achieve this,
18,000 workers are moving as much earth as was moved to build the
Panama Canal. They are creating a reservoir larger than Lake
Constance to build the world's third-largest dam, which is also
expected to become a symbol of Brazil's motto "Ordem e
Progresso," or "Order and Progress."
"When
you therefore shall see the abomination of desolation," Kräutler
says, quoting Matthew, Chapter 24, Verse 15. He says that the
reservoir will be a dead, putrid lake, and that the dam will spell
the end of the river that feeds into it, the Rio Xingu, the largest
tributary of the Amazon, which flows directly past the bishop's see.
According to Kräutler, there will be a rise in dengue fever, the
river upstream from the dam will flood the city, and the government
will have to resettle at least 40,000 people, especially the poorest
of the poor, who tend to live near the water.
Meanwhile,
the indigenous people living downstream from the dam will be left
high and dry, forced to leave their land when they can no longer
catch fish. Kräutler calls it "the last bit of paradise."
'Avatar'
in Brazil
He
is convinced that the government, contrary to its promises, will
build more dams along the river to produce the electricity it needs
for industry and for economic growth in the entire country. Brazil's
power consumption is expected to increase by more than half by 2020,
at which point Belo Monte will cover one-tenth of the energy needs
for a country almost as large as Europe. Given the dam's estimated
construction cost of almost €11 billion, say proponents, how
significant is a single bend of the river, and how significant are a
few hundred local tribes people?
The
dam is Brazil's most controversial project. Everyone in the country
has an opinion about Belo Monte, especially after it was criticized
by a few actors in the serial TV dramas known as telenovelas that are
so popular among Brazilians. On the surface, it appears to be a
relatively straightforward situation. On the one side of the
controversy are the Norte Energia construction consortium, corrupt
government officials and the Energy Ministry, and on the other side
are the indigenous people, the rainforest and hundreds of thousands
of turtles. It's an age-old conflict, pitting good against evil, like
the one depicted in director James Cameron's film "Avatar,"
in which native people shoot arrows at the bulldozers of big
corporations.
When
Cameron came to the Amazon region in the spring of 2010, because he
believed that the story depicted in his film had suddenly become a
reality, he arrived on a propeller plane and was taken up the bend in
the river in a motor boot. He spoke to a group representing several
indigenous tribes. The Cacique Giliard Juruna, a headman of sorts,
was also there. He had seen Cameron on television and was proud of
the fact that the director had come to the region.
Cameron
said: "You already have the greatest wealth in the world."
He pointed to the river and said: "You have fish." He
pointed to the forest and said: "You have the forest." It
was his way of explaining their world to the locals. He also said:
"You have the kind of wealth that my world doesn't understand."
Then he returned to the city and donated half a million dollars.
It
was the same message that his film had conveyed: The local people are
saints, but to survive they need a white man, like ex-Marine Jake
Sully in "Avatar." One wonders how much that visit actually
changed Cameron and what he meant by the wealth that our world
doesn't understand. Cameron seems a little like the musician Sting,
who once sang at a benefit concert for the indigenous people of the
Amazon, but who also flew to New York on the Concorde once and raved
about how great it felt to be flying at twice the speed of sound.
Part
2: Rotting Fish on Riverbanks
Village
spokesman Giliard is the son of the best fisherman in Moratu, a child
of the Xingu River, as he says, and the great-grandchild of the last
great shaman who, as the story goes, could kill people with his
breath alone. Giliard lives in the river bend behind the dam, in the
place Kräutler describes as a paradise.
He
has just been shopping in the city, where he bought a large piece of
beef, two packs of Derby Azul cigarettes, a Chinese-made Tiger Head
flashlight and extra batteries. He is wearing a T-shirt with the
words "Championship - Living your Lifestyle" printed on it.
Giliard puts on his helmet, gets onto his Honda and, before pulling
the clutch, says: "I don't have a driver's license, so we'll
have to drive around the police checkpoints."
He
drives out of Altamira, past the fields where investors will soon
build new supermarkets, and past housing for the workers. Some of
them are from neighboring tribes and think nothing of working on the
dam. He continues driving out into the rainforest, as the evening fog
rises. Jupiter has risen. The trees aren't on fire yet.
But
they'll be burning again tomorrow, set on fire by landowners who need
the space for their cattle. To get home, Giliard must cross the
excavated canal being built -- day and night -- between the planned
dam and the planned power plant.
On
the one side, they are filling in his river, which will soon carry
only as much water as it normally carries in the dry season, a river
where dead fish are rotting and the water is becoming muddier. On the
other side, they blast through the rock twice a day to create holes
for turbines as big as houses.
German
companies are being paid just under half a billion euros to supply
four of the turbines, along with generators, all the transformers and
the entire automation system. They are part of a consortium headed by
engineering giant Siemens and Voith, a mechanical engineering firm.
Mercedes is supplying the trucks, while Munich Re is insuring a
portion of the project. As it happens, Germany needs the aluminum
that Brazil exports and produces in such an energy-intensive way.
'I'm
Ashamed'
It's
late in the evening by the time Giliard reaches his village on the
edge of the forest, a collection of 12 houses under a starry sky. He
puts away his motorcycle, and then he wades gingerly into the river,
as if he were afraid to shatter the mirrored surface of the water.
The river is so wide that the opposite bank disappears into the
darkness, almost unimaginably enormous by German standards.
The
generator is running. The Cacique greets his children and turns on
the TV. He watches the rich in their telenovelas, idling their lives
away without having to work. What does he think when he crosses the
canal that cuts through his forest? "I'm ashamed that we could
allow it to happen," he says.
Giliard
is at work the next morning. His tool is a Swedish chainsaw for
hardwood, a Husqvarna with an anti-vibration system that operates at
9,300 rpm. He is standing barefoot on a Brazil nut tree, known
locally as a "castanheira." It's on the IUCN (International
Union for Conservation of Nature) red list of threatened species and
is one of the largest trees in the Amazon. This particular specimen
is a beauty, well over 100 years old. Giliard is going to saw the
tree into planks.
The
lumber would fetch a lot of money on the market, but Giliard wants to
build a house with it. He marks the cutting line on the light-colored
wood with used oil and a chalk line, tightens the chain on his saw
and opens the throttle. Later, when it's quiet again, the birds have
fallen silent, and the clearing smells of gasoline, Giliard,
exhausted, drinks water from a blue plastic container. Does he really
believe that the tree has a soul?
His
brother, sitting next to him, bursts out laughing. But Giliard tries
to remain polite. These are the kinds of questions only white men
ask, men who have never dragged lumber across the ground with a
winch, burned down trees or built new houses. "No," he
says, "we don't believe in that anymore."
Remembering
the Trees
Two
days later and two hours upriver, Pedro Blanco, a spokesman for the
construction consortium, is standing on a hill, looking away from the
Rio Xingu, which has begun to dry up. Blanco's job is to explain what
is happening below, where the river will be cut off, where suction
devices will pump up the sludge, and where the roots of the trees
will dry up.
Instead,
Blanco is using his iPhone to photograph one of the last castanheiras
left standing. The workers separate garbage on the construction site
and rescue baby turtles, and they also leave certain protected trees
unharmed. Blanco takes a close-up picture of the tree bark, with the
dark leaf canopy in the background contrasting sharply with the sky
above. "Porque é bonito," "because it's beautiful,"
he says later. Of course the tree has a soul, he says, "everything
that lives has a soul."
Giliard
and Blanco are like dissonant tones in a song. One of them should
love nature but sees it as a raw material. The other one should love
his dam but romanticizes nature.
Volunteers
and environmentalists rave about the region's 25 tribes, with their
24 different languages, as different as Chinese and Arabic, and about
the dozens of different notions about creation. But Giliard, the
Cacique of the Juruna tribe, speaks Portuguese. He doesn't like the
new road to his village, and yet he takes it because it's usually
faster than traveling upriver by boat.
His
father is a fisherman, but the village children want to become
teachers or soldiers. A tree is a tree for Giliard. He hopes his
village will one day have a doctor and a secondary school, and will
provide people with the opportunity to make enough money to get by.
That is wealth to him. Why should he live the way director Cameron
thinks Amazon Indians should live?
The
old people say that there used to be a beach on the Rio Xingu. But
today there is nothing but waste floating by where there once was
sand. Norte Energia had in fact planned to build a sewage treatment
plant, but the waste is still released directly into the river.
Round-the-Clock
Security
When
Bishop Kräutler first came to Altamira as a young man from the
Austrian town of Koblach, it felt full of promise. Today, he says, it
feels more like a war. Four policemen protect him at all hours of the
day, and he doesn't take a step or deliver a homily without them. The
bishop fought for the indigenous people's right, as enshrined in the
constitution, to determine what happens to their land. During the
dispute, a truck slammed into his car, killing the person in the
passenger seat.
He
opposed a $500 million (€369 million) loan from the World Bank. He
is a thorn in the side of the businesses that hope to strike it rich
with the dam, businesses that are often among the biggest donors to
political parties. He points out a hole in a rock behind nine
security cameras. It was where an employee was shot to death in 1995,
and where a nun was killed 10 years later. She, too, had fought
against the dam.
Kräutler
would love to go jogging again, outside in front of his house and
along the river he loves. But the police forbid it. It is one of the
precautionary measures they take to keep him from getting killed.
Instead, he now gets his exercise by walking in the cloistered
courtyard before sunrise every morning, 65 steps up and 65 steps
back, walking for as long as it takes to say three rosaries. He has
been deprived of his outer freedom, he says, but they can't take away
his inner freedom.
Trappings
of Modern Luxury
Today,
Altamira is the kind of city where it's possible to have your dog
picked up, blow-dried and massaged for the equivalent of €30.
Employees wash the sidewalks with detergent in front of some hotels.
The dam brings money into the city. Even the prostitutes in the
brothel for workers say: "Protecting nature is all very well and
good, but life has to go on."
Tens
of thousands, including workers and suppliers, are flooding into the
bloated city. Every few days the power goes out for several hours and
when that happens workers continue unloading new refrigerators from
donkey carts by candlelight. Advertising slogans blare from
loudspeakers on mopeds, slogans like: "Now you can fulfill your
dreams."
With
the trappings of modern life -- plucked eyebrows, installment loans
for cars, tuxedos for children and so much waste that it attracts the
urubus -- Altamira is a city that needs electricity, just as James
Cameron, Erwin Kräutler, Pedro Blanco and Giliard Juruna need
electricity. Belo Monte will give them that electricity. That's the
promise. The project will only be economically viable if additional
dams are built.
To
build the dam, they have locked the admonishing Dom Erwin, as the
bishop is known locally, in his own house. He says that many of the
Indians have been kept quiet with the money from compensation
payments for their land, which the dam will destroy. The indigenous
people are expected to receive €570 million from the government.
Although prominent tribesmen have repeatedly protested against the
dam, most have given up.
The
developer pays for Giliard's TV set, his Honda, his diesel fuel, his
chainsaw and his new boat. In early January, he and a group of
like-minded citizens blocked the access road to the dam, shutting
down the work for days. They demanded more money, about €100,000,
to make up for the silted river water, but in the end they agreed to
accept only a third of that amount from the developer.
Bishop
Kräutler has a term for this: "modern glass beads." It
isn't genocide, he says, but "auricide," or genocide
through gold. The Indians now come into the city and use the money
they were given to buy things they never needed before. On the other
hand, the indigenous people view the river as the "house of the
gods."
Observing
the Vultures
For
many, however, more important than the house of the gods today is the
Caso do Índio, or the House of the Indian. It's a bleak building, a
sort of boarding house for those who once owned the land. Many arrive
there, big-eyed and timid, pulling suitcases and holding turtles.
This
is where the indigenous people sleep when they have something to do
in the city, or are waiting for money. There are pieces of paper
attached to the doors with the names of the tribes, looking like
unsolved puzzles: Xingu, Arara, Araweté, Xikrin, Kayapó, Juruna,
Parakanã, Asurini, Xipaya.
A
woman who lives there has forgotten how to say her name in her native
language. She dreams of fat children. She calls it a good dream. She
likes the city because there are no wild animals there. She doesn't
like it that the white people think indigenous people are lazy. She
is afraid of frogs. She likes MSN better than Facebook, which she
uses through her sister's account. She prefers Samsung to Apple. She
likes the eye shadow she is wearing.
The
Indian woman says that language is the most important thing, that it
preserves her identity. But her husband is from a neighboring tribe,
and she doesn't understand him when he speaks his language. Instead,
they speak Portuguese with each other and their children.
Money
is the Indians' weakness, says Kräutler, and the managers of the dam
company are like black vultures. When the vulture is searching for a
meal, it flies high above the ground, all of its senses focused on
the carrion, and glides down to feed on the dead body. But if the
bird cannot find carrion, it hunts the weak. A flock of vultures can
even kill a calf, as the birds peck away at the most sensitive areas:
the eyes, the tongue and the nose. The calf goes into shock, and the
vultures move in for the kill.
Translated
from the German by Christopher Sultan
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