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CrimeBrazil

Brazil arrests 5 more in murder of Amazon expert, journalist

August 7, 2022

Police have accused the suspects of involvement in an illegal fishing ring. Three of those arrested are suspected of hiding the bodies of Dom Phillips and Bruno Pereira.

Suspect Oseney da Costa de Oliveira is led out of a courthouse by a police officer
The suspects have been accused of running an illegal fishing ring and hiding the remains of murdred journalist Dom PhillipsImage: Edmar Barros/AP Photo/picture alliance

Brazil's federal police on Saturday arrested five additional suspects in the murder of British journalist Dom Phillips and indigenous expert Bruno Pereira.

The pair were killed in the Vale do Javari region of the Amazon rainforest in June.

What did police say?

Police said in a statement that seven arrest warrants were issued for illegal fishing in Vale do Javari.

The region has been invaded by illegal fishermen, loggers and gold miners. Police say it is also a key drug trafficking route.

Two of the seven suspects were already in custody, Ruben Dario da Silva Villar "Colombia" and Amarildo Costa de Oliveira "Pelado". Three of the newly arrested men were relatives of Costa and were involved in concealing the bodies of Philips and Pereira, police said.

According to police, da Silva was the leader and financier of an armed gang involved in illegal fishing and exporting illegally caught fish to other countries. Da Silva is a Colombian citizen and also used a Peruvian document, police said.

Pereira had worked to end illegal fishing in the regionImage: Eraldo Peres/AP Photo/picture alliance

Why were Phillips and Pereira killed?

Pereira had previously clashed with the Costa over illegal fishing within the indigenous territories.

Federal prosecutors have said that Pereira and Phillips were killed because they had asked to photograph the suspects.

Indigenous leaders who worked with Pereira accuse da Silva of ordering him killed as payback for having organized Indigenous patrols in the region, which seized hauls of illegally caught fish.

sdi/aw (AP, AFP, Reuters)

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