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Native groups state Brazil plans Amazon grain train behind their backs

Native individuals who see a threat to their ancestral lands from the building and construction of a. railway to bring grains to a port in the Amazon on Monday pulled. out of a work group developed by the government last year to. advance the task.

The Munduruku and Kayapo people, along with tribes from the. Xingu appointment said in a letter to the Transportation Ministry. that the work group was refraining from doing its job of discussing the. 1,000-km (620-mile) Ferrograo railway with all celebrations.

The ministry did not right away reply to an ask for. remark, nor did state infrastructure business Infra S.A. responsible for the task.

The Ferrograo plan is backed by farmers and grain traders. who say it would minimize dependence on roadways and lower expenses for. carrying soy from the farm state of Mato Grosso to the river. ports in the Amazon basin for export. Native communities state. they have actually not been spoken with on a job that will impact their. environment and cause deforestation.

Brazil's Supreme Court last year suspended the plan pending. more studies on the impact of the controversial train.

There is no regard. The government is not consulting us,. said Alessandra Munduruku, winner of the 2023 Goldman. Environmental Prize for her efforts to stop mining development. in the Amazon. They just wish to grow and export more soy, she. informed outside the ministry.

In their letter to the transport minister, Native. communities stated the research studies were made with no conversation or. participation of the work group, which transport regulator. ANTT was preparing to open quotes for the building of the. railway. ANTT said there was presently no timing for an auction.

From today onwards, we will no longer participate in the. work group. However we will spare no effort to stop this destructive. job, the letter seen said.

The train would lead to logging and affect the lands. of 16 Indigenous individuals all this to increase the revenues of. large multinational companies that export soybeans and corn.

The government says the train would assist protect the. region general by reducing heavy traffic on a highway joining. the very same points, and cut making use of nonrenewable fuel sources in trucks. Sydney Possuelo, Brazil's leading specialist on separated people,. agreed the railway was the lower of two evils as it would. generate less outsiders than an improved highway in an area. already a hotbed for land grabbers, illegal miners and loggers.

(source: Reuters)