‘Amazonia, you beauty!’ How the murders of Dom Phillips and Bruno Pereira renewed the fight for Brazil’s forests

Six months on, is something positive coming from the killings that shocked the world?

Sunday 5 June started peacefully for Dom Phillips. The British journalist was in the rainforest on a reporting trip for his book, How to Save the Amazon. Just after dawn he got in a small launch with his friend and guide, Bruno Pereira, and they travelled up the Itaquaí River, only the sound of the birds and the motor breaking the comforting silence. But then they were ambushed and both men were shot dead. The killers, angry at Pereira for trying to stop their illegal fishing racket, dragged their bodies into the forest and buried them.

The murders hit headlines around the world and shone a light on a region where violence has soared since rightwing president Jair Bolsonaro took power on 1 January 2019. After a slow response, Brazilian police, with the considerable assistance of the Indigenous local people, took action and three people are in jail awaiting trial for the killings. Another man identified as the possible intellectual author of the crime was released from custody in October and is under house arrest.

The murder of a universally liked journalist and a highly respected Indigenous activist was a shock, but it has brought people together in unimaginable ways. Hundreds of Phillips’ friends and family exchanged hugs and stories at services in Rio de Janeiro and London. DJs who knew him from his time editing Mixmag held tribute nights. And universities are hosting conferences on the issues Phillips and Pereira’s deaths brought to the world’s attention.

Murals went up around the world; T-shirts bearing their likenesses were posted all over social media; and the words of Phillips’ last Instagram post, “Amazonia, you beauty”, became a catchphrase for those appreciative of the region’s allure.

A crowdfunding campaign raised money for the families they left behind. Films are in the works, and five writers have been approached to produce the chapters that will finish Phillips’ book. Publication is now set for 2024.

The pair’s influence has been felt on a grand scale, too. When they died, Bolsonaro slandered them, suggesting they only had themselves to blame for travelling in a dangerous region. The murders – combined with a growing awareness of the climate crisis – led to a renewed focus on the Amazon, and perhaps even contributed to Bolsonaro’s defeat in this October’s general election. Leftist challenger Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva beat the incumbent in a tightly fought runoff after promising to put the environment and climate crisis at the centre of his agenda.

Deforestation hit a 15-year high under Bolsonaro, and Lula has vowed to repeat the success of his earlier Workers’ party government, when deforestation was slashed by more than 80%. He even vowed to create a Ministry of Native Peoples and appoint an Indigenous leader to run it.

Those decisions were welcomed by people close to Phillips, and while the attention showered on the humble 57-year-old from Merseyside has been more bitter than sweet, his Brazilian wife and British family have tried to take something positive from the tragedy. “The personal tributes, the obituaries, the films, the exhibitions, all of them honouring him, it is hugely moving,” says Sian Phillips, Dom’s sister.

“He was not an egotist and I keep thinking of him saying: ‘Oh no, it’s me in the news again.’ But on the other hand, because people are talking about the Amazon … that would have been the best response from this situation for him. It would be at least something.”

Contributor

Andrew Downie

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Ex-chief of Brazil’s Indigenous agency charged over murders of Bruno Pereira and Dom Phillips
Marcelo Xavier accused of indirectly contributing on the grounds that he failed to take steps to protect workers in Amazon

Tom Phillips in Rio de Janeiro

19, May, 2023 @9:19 PM

Article image
Indigenous groups scour forests and rivers for Dom Phillips and Bruno Pereira
Indigenous activists have been searching for the missing pair since just hours after they vanished, with support from armed members of the military police

Tom Phillips on the River Itaquaí

10, Jun, 2022 @2:12 PM

Article image
Brazil ‘failing to fully investigate’ Dom Phillips and Bruno Pereira murders
Rights groups accuse Brazilian government of not employing sufficient resources to examine case

Andrew Downie

02, Aug, 2022 @3:01 PM

Article image
Dom Phillips and Bruno Pereira will not be forgotten, vows Brazil’s Lula
President says last year’s killings were result of ‘encouragement of anarchy’ in Amazon under Bolsonaro

Tom Phillips in Rio de Janeiro

01, Jun, 2023 @1:45 PM

Article image
Five more people arrested in Brazil over murders of Dom Phillips and Bruno Pereira
Suspect already in custody is likely leader of illegal fishing mafia based in Amazon region, police say

Andrew Downie

06, Aug, 2022 @7:34 PM

Article image
Brazilian police name alleged ‘mastermind’ behind murders of Dom Phillips and Bruno Pereira
Police chief says Rubens Villar Coelho, whose nickname is Colômbia, ordered the murders of the British journalist and Brazilian Indigenous expert

Tom Phillips in Rio de Janeiro

23, Jan, 2023 @9:45 PM

Article image
Brazil’s weak response to Phillips–Pereira murders threatens Indigenous people, lawyer says
Rescue mission coordinator condemns failure to arrest masterminds behind murders of Dom Phillips and Bruno Pereira

Nina Lakhani in New York

16, Jul, 2022 @6:00 AM

Article image
‘No one came out of there unchanged’: the Ukrainian soldiers who survived the siege of Azovstal
Thousands took shelter in the tunnels of the steelworks in Mariupol for more than two months as Russia bombarded it with missiles. It remains unclear how many are now in captivity

Lorenzo Tondo

23, Dec, 2022 @2:00 PM

Article image
Dom Phillips and Bruno Pereira remembered in Lancaster exhibition
Exhibition at Halton Mill is part of a month of activities about the Amazon commemorating Phillips and Pereira

Helen Pidd North of England editor

29, Oct, 2022 @6:00 AM

Article image
Bruno Pereira obituary
Expert on the Indigenous peoples of Brazil committed to defending the traditional ways of life in the Amazon

Andrew Downie

06, Jul, 2022 @1:56 PM