Translate page with Google

Story Publication logo July 14, 2022

Coca Plantation Expansion in Peru Heats up the Search for Indigenous Labor in Alto Solimões (Portuguese)

Country:

Authors:
a man is being escorted by a police officer.
English

A series of investigative reports will look into the actions of the authorities and institutions in...

author #1 image author #2 image
Multiple Authors
SECTIONS

This story excerpt was translated from Portuguese. To read the original story in full, visit Agência Pública. You may also view the original story on the Rainforest Journalism Fund website. Our website is available in English, Spanish, bahasa Indonesia, French, and Portuguese.


On the border with Brazil, "bosses" send boats to recruit Brazilian Indians who live in the communities along the river

  • Benjamin Constant, neighboring Atalaia, is one of the municipalities where indigenous people are recruited
  • Lack of income and jobs attracts young indigenous people to work on Peru's plantations
  • Drug Use and Enticement by Trafficking Worry Community Leaders in Alto Solimões

Genaro, a motorcycle taxi driver, pointed his red motorcycle at the horizon of an Indigenous community on the outskirts of Benjamin Constant (AM). The atmosphere there was calm, far from the bustle of neighboring Atalaia do Norte (AM), which in those days was still living the tension of the search for the then-disappeared Bruno Pereira and Dom Phillips. Genaro was wearing jeans, a cap to alleviate the midday sun of the Amazonian summer, and a colorful T-shirt made of synthetic fabric in bluish tones. Of Indigenous Tikuna identity, he agreed to meet the Agência Pública reporter to tell a personal drama: the story of his son imprisoned for drug trafficking in Colombia. Genaro's last name was suppressed to preserve his son's identity.


Como una organización periodística sin fines de lucro, dependemos de su apoyo para financiar el periodismo que cubre temas poco difundidos en todo el mundo. Done cualquier valor hoy y conviértase en un Campeón del Centro Pulitzer recibiendo beneficios exclusivos.



Genaro, resident of an indigenous community in Benjamin Constant (AM). Image by Avener Prado/Agência Pública. Brazil, 2022.

Claudio* was arrested on April 9th of this year in the city of Puerto Nariño, a city on the Colombian side of the Amazon River, on a stretch where the river marks the border between Colombia and Peru. Pública obtained the Colombian documents that prove the young man's arrest for cocaine possession — he is currently being investigated for trafficking. After a custody hearing the next day, the young man was taken to prison in neighboring Leticia, the capital of the Colombian province of Amazonas, which borders Brazil's Tabatinga. The two are called "sister cities" because they form almost a single urban area on the triple border between Peru, Brazil and Colombia (known as the Amazon Trapezium). 

Before his arrest, Claudio was engaged in a job increasingly common in the Indigenous communities of the region, both on the Brazilian side and in neighboring countries: harvesting coca leaves in the so-called "plantations" on the Peruvian side for the production of cocaine. Indigenous people, researchers and public officials who follow the issue told Pública that the Indigenous people are recruited by the "bosses," the Peruvian coca farmers, in the communities where they live.


Border between Brazil, Peru and Colombia; region dominated by coca plantations. Image by Avener Prado/Agência Pública. Brazil, 2022.

Image by Avener Prado/Agência Pública. Brazil, 2022.

Inequality and scarce labor in the region make young people and adults take risks in manual labor in the coca harvest in Peru. Image by Avener Prado/Agência Pública. Brazil, 2022.

Isaque Almeida Bastos, chief of the Filadélfia community, in Benjamin Constant (AM). Image by Avener Prado/Agência Pública. Brazil, 2022.

Pixação "Os Crias" indicates presence of factions in the indigenous neighborhood Filadélfia. Image by Avener Prado/Agência Pública. Brazil, 2022.

José takes groups of up to 20 workers to work for a season on Peru's coca farms. Image by Avener Prado/Agência Pública. Brazil, 2022.

Peruvian Tikuna indigenous Juan, a worker with extensive experience in coca harvesting. Image by Avener Prado/Agência Pública. Brazil, 2022.

Image by Avener Prado/Agência Pública. Brazil, 2022.

Image by Avener Prado/Agência Pública. Brazil, 2022.

Image by Avener Prado/Agência Pública. Brazil, 2022.

Image by Avener Prado/Agência Pública. Brazil, 2022.

Members of the Indigenous guard in Tabatinga. Image by Avener Prado/Agência Pública. Brazil, 2022.

Dispute between the country's criminal factions for control of border drug crossings increases violence in the region. Image by Avener Prado/Agência Pública. Brazil, 2022.

RELATED TOPICS

war and conflict reporting

Topic

War and Conflict

War and Conflict
teal halftone illustration of a young indigenous person

Topic

Indigenous Rights

Indigenous Rights

Support our work

Your support ensures great journalism and education on underreported and systemic global issues