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What we know in case of missing British journalist and Amazon expert

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  • The search for a British journalist and a Brazilian Indigenous expert who vanished deep in the Amazon enters its 11th day on Wednesday.
  • Bruno Pereira and Dom Phillips were last seen on the morning of Sunday, 5 June, in the village of Sao Gabriel, travelling in a new motorised boat.
  • The Javari Valley, where the men disappeared, is a remote jungle region home to 26 different Indigenous peoples, many of which live in isolation.

The search for a British journalist and a Brazilian Indigenous expert who vanished deep in the Amazon enters its 11th day on Wednesday amid fading hopes of finding them alive and persistent international pressure to resolve the case.

This is what we know so far:

Two missing men 

Veteran freelance journalist Dom Phillips, 57, has worked in Brazil for the past 15 years, reporting for media including The New York Times, Washington Post, Financial Times and The Guardian, where he is a regular contributor.

Phillips is an impassioned defender of the Amazon. He went missing in a remote region called the Javari Valley while doing research for a book on sustainable ways to protect the world's largest rainforest.

Bruno Pereira, 41, is an expert who was on leave from his job with the Brazilian government's Indigenous affairs agency, or FUNAI, and a well-known advocate for these communities. He was accompanying the Briton as a guide on Phillips' second trip to the region since 2018.

Veteran foreign correspondent Dom Phillips talks t
Veteran foreign correspondent Dom Phillips talks to two indigenous men in Aldeia Maloca Papiú, Roraima State, Brazil, on 16 November 2019. Phillips went missing while researching a book in the Brazilian Amazon's Javari Valley with respected indigenous expert Bruno Pereira.

Pereira was the regional coordinator of FUNAI in Atalaia do Norte, the town where Phillips was headed when the two of them vanished.

The Javari Valley is rife with illegal fishing, logging, mining and drug trafficking. Pereira's work defending Indigenous people drew frequent threats against him from criminal gangs operating in the area.

Both of the missing men are married and Pereira has three children.


What happened?

Phillips and Pereira were last seen on the morning of Sunday, 5 June, in the village of Sao Gabriel, not far from Atalaia do Norte, where they were headed by way of the Itaquai River.

They were travelling in a new motorised boat with enough fuel to get where they were going. Their journey had started days earlier at Lake Jaburu, where they had interviewed local people.

A 'complex' region

The Javari Valley, where the men disappeared, is a remote jungle region home to 26 different Indigenous peoples, many of which live in isolation.

Authorities warned that the region is "complex" because of the presence of rogue miners, loggers and fishermen who invade protected Indigenous lands to exploit their resources.

What is more, drug trafficking in the region has grown in recent years. The area is used as a conduit to transport drugs produced in Peru and Colombia, which border Brazil.

Indigenous members of the Union of Indigenous Peop
Indigenous members of the Union of Indigenous Peoples of the Javari Valley (UNIVAJA), look for clues that lead to the whereabouts of veteran correspondent Dom Phillips and respected indigenous specialist Bruno Pereira, in Vale do Javari, municipality of Atalaia do Norte, state of Amazonas, Brazil, on 13 June 2022.


Two detainees, some evidence

The search is being led by Indigenous people and Brazilian security forces.

On Sunday the security forces said they found personal items belonging to the pair, including Pereira's health card, pants and boots, as well as Phillips's backpack and clothing.

Officials said these items were found in the water near the home of Amarildo da Costa Oliveira, the first person to be detained in the case.

Witnesses saw this 41-year-old fisherman in a motor boat following that of Phillips and Pereira at high speed before they disappeared.

Police found blood on a tarp in Oliveira's boat. He denies any involvement.

Authorities are analysing the blood and what are believed to be human remains found in the area, and results are expected this week.

Dom Phillips, Bruno Pereira
Employees of the National Indigenous Foundation protest over missing British journalist Dom Phillips and Brazilian Indigenous affairs specialist Bruno Pereira.


On Tuesday, police arrested a second man identified as Oseney da Costa Oliveira, also 41, who according to Brazilian media site G1 is the brother of the first suspect.

Police also said they had seized cartridges for a firearm as well as an oar, without specifying if they were found in the same location where the second suspect was detained.

President Jair Bolsonaro said on Monday: 

The evidence leads us to believe something bad was done to them, because human innards were found floating in the river, which are now undergoing DNA testing.

It is not clear if he was referring to the same remains that the police said they had found.

Criticism and confusion

The search for the men and their boat continues.

Confusion arose on Monday when relatives of the journalist said a Brazilian diplomat in London told them two bodies had been found and the remains were being analyzed to see if they belonged to Phillips or Pereira.

But Federal Police, who are the official spokespeople in this drama, denied that bodies had been found. Indigenous people taking part in the search also issued a denial.

The federal government has been criticized by environmental activists, international agencies and Brazilian justice officials for alleged slowness and lack of coordination in the search.

Bolsonaro at first said Phillips and Pereira had embarked on an "unadvisable adventure" by traveling in a dangerous area without protection. This drew a rebuke from civil society organisations which defended their work to preserve the Amazon.



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