The Japan Times - Murder rate in Amazon far higher than rest of Brazil: study

EUR -
AED 3.839032
AFN 78.318295
ALL 98.686181
AMD 418.630098
ANG 1.881327
AOA 955.800527
ARS 1094.340711
AUD 1.653056
AWG 1.881379
AZN 1.776484
BAM 1.96609
BBD 2.10768
BDT 127.301836
BGN 1.95521
BHD 0.393966
BIF 3088.952288
BMD 1.045211
BND 1.416338
BOB 7.213608
BRL 6.192247
BSD 1.043856
BTN 90.188095
BWP 14.488773
BYN 3.416238
BYR 20486.127443
BZD 2.096843
CAD 1.497813
CDF 2974.669187
CHF 0.945842
CLF 0.037408
CLP 1032.197824
CNY 7.568896
CNH 7.571683
COP 4417.331682
CRC 526.79962
CUC 1.045211
CUP 27.69808
CVE 110.642972
CZK 25.098667
DJF 185.893259
DKK 7.460462
DOP 64.058834
DZD 140.778224
EGP 52.565522
ERN 15.678159
ETB 133.481592
FJD 2.408426
FKP 0.860822
GBP 0.842409
GEL 2.994518
GGP 0.860822
GHS 15.81495
GIP 0.860822
GMD 75.255015
GNF 9026.836922
GTQ 8.06756
GYD 218.395023
HKD 8.137283
HNL 26.57679
HRK 7.713182
HTG 136.42605
HUF 409.69429
IDR 16898.024029
ILS 3.734135
IMP 0.860822
INR 90.199058
IQD 1367.445216
IRR 43990.30736
ISK 145.880122
JEP 0.860822
JMD 164.110625
JOD 0.741576
JPY 162.260058
KES 135.187213
KGS 91.401889
KHR 4203.359256
KMF 493.745458
KPW 940.689642
KRW 1496.219752
KWD 0.321998
KYD 0.869955
KZT 543.516327
LAK 22759.531956
LBP 93480.648443
LKR 311.701834
LRD 206.696102
LSL 19.376608
LTL 3.086235
LVL 0.632237
LYD 5.137501
MAD 10.437907
MDL 19.46832
MGA 4893.717616
MKD 61.575094
MMK 3394.803205
MNT 3551.625676
MOP 8.375451
MRU 41.579439
MUR 48.455717
MVR 16.094183
MWK 1810.183838
MXN 21.211368
MYR 4.590463
MZN 66.78705
NAD 19.376422
NGN 1626.358483
NIO 38.411218
NOK 11.724064
NPR 144.300952
NZD 1.830363
OMR 0.402336
PAB 1.043861
PEN 3.882188
PGK 4.190355
PHP 61.014694
PKR 290.959273
PLN 4.213021
PYG 8254.118238
QAR 3.8054
RON 4.975724
RSD 117.116883
RUB 104.389962
RWF 1449.050156
SAR 3.920503
SBD 8.828422
SCR 14.91201
SDG 628.171368
SEK 11.452702
SGD 1.409059
SHP 0.860822
SLE 23.731231
SLL 21917.543254
SOS 596.638199
SRD 36.692093
STD 21633.748813
SVC 9.134028
SYP 13589.827995
SZL 19.384219
THB 35.214217
TJS 11.425531
TMT 3.658237
TND 3.332886
TOP 2.447983
TRY 37.312999
TTD 7.096105
TWD 34.121421
TZS 2649.608991
UAH 43.843475
UGX 3847.123903
USD 1.045211
UYU 45.68607
UZS 13549.156159
VES 58.754499
VND 26198.203283
VUV 124.089499
WST 2.927454
XAF 658.205521
XAG 0.033877
XAU 0.000376
XCD 2.824734
XDR 0.804348
XOF 658.199202
XPF 119.331742
YER 260.363701
ZAR 19.24459
ZMK 9408.155357
ZMW 29.045947
ZWL 336.557382
  • RBGPF

    61.2800

    61.28

    +100%

  • CMSC

    -0.0050

    23.485

    -0.02%

  • RYCEF

    0.2800

    7.55

    +3.71%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    11.6

    +0.17%

  • RELX

    0.1300

    49.39

    +0.26%

  • NGG

    0.6600

    60.71

    +1.09%

  • BCC

    0.5300

    128.45

    +0.41%

  • GSK

    0.6200

    34.05

    +1.82%

  • RIO

    0.4400

    61.56

    +0.71%

  • CMSD

    -0.0900

    23.87

    -0.38%

  • AZN

    0.4000

    68.6

    +0.58%

  • BCE

    0.0700

    23.22

    +0.3%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    12.55

    +0.16%

  • VOD

    0.0200

    8.4

    +0.24%

  • BTI

    0.4800

    37.05

    +1.3%

  • BP

    0.3600

    31.49

    +1.14%

Murder rate in Amazon far higher than rest of Brazil: study
Murder rate in Amazon far higher than rest of Brazil: study / Photo: MAURO PIMENTEL - AFP/File

Murder rate in Amazon far higher than rest of Brazil: study

The murder rate in Brazil's Amazon is far higher than the national average, largely because of territorial conflict in a region prey to organized crime, an NGO said Wednesday.

Text size:

Last year, there were 32.3 homicides per 100,000 inhabitants in the vast rainforest region, compared with a nationwide rate of 22.8 -- a 41.5-percent difference, according to the study by the Brazilian Forum on Public Security (FBSP).

In all, there were 8,603 killings recorded in Brazil's Amazon in 2023, it said.

The NGO said it had drawn a direct correlation between the opening of roads in the Amazon, and stepped-up economic activity, with an increase in violence.

Organized crime present was drug trafficking, as well as illegal logging and other illicit environmental businesses, it said.

"This control goes through chains of production, including cattle-raising in state land taken by land-grabbers, illegal logging, predatory fishing and, mainly, mining on Indigenous land," FBSP director Renato Sergio de Lima said.

The struggle to control tracts of land "occurs in violent ways" and "connects all the main criminal activities" in the Amazon, he said.

The Amazon rainforest -- whose survival is crucial to slowing the pace of global warming -- accounts for 59 percent of Brazilian territory, where it covers five million square kilometers (1.9 million square miles).

More than half of Brazil's Indigenous population lives in that region.

The FBSP study identified criminal groups in a third of the Brazilian Amazon's 772 municipalities -- areas in which 83.7 percent of the homicides occurred.

One of Brazil's biggest crime organizations, the Comando Vermelho (meaning "red command") dominates half of those communities, the study said.

Another 28 are controlled by a rival outfit, the Primeiro Comando da Capital ("capital's first command"), while 85 are being fought over or are prey to multiple groups.

While the FBSP study noted a small reduction of 6.2 percent in lethal violence over the period 2021-2023 compared to the previous three-year span, its researchers said that did not substantially change the overall picture for violence.

Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva's government in June launched a plan to boost state security forces in the Amazon.

Outside monitoring of illegal activities harming the Amazon environment was last month given as the reason for the 2022 double murder of a British journalist, Dom Phillips, and a Brazilian Indigenous expert, Bruno Pereira.

Federal police concluded that the two were shot dead in a remote Indigenous reserve because of Pereira's monitoring of poaching and other illegal activities going on in the Amazon.

Phillips, a 57-year-old freelancer for The Guardian and The Washington Post, had been traveling with Pereira to research a book he was writing about the rainforest.

Their hacked-up bodies were found days after their disappearance. Autopsies showed they had been shot with shells used for hunting.

Several people accused of illegal fishing and drug trafficking in the region were arrested over their murders.

T.Sato--JT