‘Heartbroken’: family pay tribute to Dom Phillips
and Bruno Pereira
Colleagues call for journalist and Indigenous
activist’s work to be inspiration to others
Daniel
Boffey
Thu 16 Jun
2022 13.21 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/jun/16/dom-phillips-bruno-pereira-families-tributes
The family
of Dom Phillips have spoken of their heartbreak over the murder of the British
journalist and the Indigenous activist Bruno Pereira as colleagues called for
the men’s work to be an inspiration to others.
In a
statement issued on behalf of Phillips’ sister Sian, his brother Gareth, and
their partners and children, the family offered thanks to those who had taken
part in the 10-day search.
The
Repórter Brasil news and investigations website, for whom Phillips had worked,
blacked out its front page online. The page read: “Mourning”. “Repórter Brasil
continues to investigate violence against traditional people in the
countryside, as well as against all who defend you”, it said.
Phillips, 57, and Pereira, 41 went missing on 5 June,
at the end of a short trip down the Itaquaí River in western Brazil.
Pereira was
accompanying Phillips on a reporting trip for a book about sustainable
development in the Amazon but their boat did not arrive as scheduled at Atalaia
do Norte, not far from Brazil’s border with Peru.
At a press
briefing late on Wednesday, the regional police chief, Eduardo Fontes,
announced that one of the two men arrested in connection with the pair’s
disappearance had confessed to killing them.
Philips’
siblings said in their statement that were particularly grateful for the
leading efforts of the Indigenous people at a time when the local authorities
were widely regarded as having taken a lethargic approach to the men’s
disappearance.
With
reference to the two men’s partners, Alessandra and Beatriz, the family wrote:
“We are heartbroken at the confirmation that Dom and Bruno were murdered and
extend our deepest sympathies to Alessandra, Beatriz and the other Brazilian
family members of both men. We are grateful to all those who have taken part in
the search, especially the Indigenous groups who worked tirelessly to find
evidence of the attack.”
The
statement went on: “In due course we will offer our perspective on the
courageous lives and important work of these remarkable men but for the moment,
we request that representatives of the media allow the family some peace to
deal privately with what has happened to their beloved Dom.
“We thank
the many people who have joined us in urging the authorities to intensify the
search and those who have reached out with wards of comfort and sympathy.”
The suspect
who confessed to taking part in the murder of Phillips and Pereira informed the
police on Tuesday of the location of the bodies and he joined investigators to
retrieve them on Wednesday.
The
location, an area known as the Lago do Preguiça is 1hr 40min by boat from the
river town of Atalaia do Norte and another 1.9 miles by foot into dense forest.
Phillips’
wife, Alessandra Sampaio, had issued a statement on Wednesday evening in which
she spoke of her relief that the bodies had been recovered after an agonising
week and a half.
“This
tragic outcome puts an end to the anguish of not knowing Dom and Bruno’s
whereabouts,” she wrote.
“Now we can
bring them home and say goodbye with love.
“Today, we
also begin our quest for justice. I hope that the investigations exhaust all
possibilities and bring definitive answers on all relevant details as soon as
possible.”
Pereira’s
wife, Beatriz Matos, tweeted: “Now that Bruno’s spirits are wandering in the
forest and spread among us, our strength is much greater.”
Jonathan
Watts, the Guardian’s global environment editor, said he hoped that the two
men’s lives would be an inspiration to those who cared about the Amazon.
“This is a
horror story that will chill anyone who is a journalist, anyone who cares about
the Amazon, about Indigenous people, about our planetary life support systems,”
Watts said. “But I hope it will inspire rather than deter editors and
reporters, so that there is even more attention on the stories that Dom cared
about.
“I really
hope that the work Dom started can be continued and amplified. And that for me
would be the only way something decent could come out of something so utterly
monstrous.”
Pat
Venditti, executive director of Greenpeace UK, praised Phillips and Pereira as
“brave, passionate and determined men”.
In a
statement, he said the men “were murdered while doing their vital work of
shining a light on the daily threats Indigenous peoples in Brazil face as they
defend their land and their rights”.
Venditti
accused Brazil’s far-right president, Jair Bolsonaro, of giving “political and
moral licence for predatory activities in and around Indigenous lands”.
“The
greatest tribute we can pay Bruno and Dom now is to continue their vital work
until all of Brazil’s peoples and their forests are fully protected,” the
Greenpeace official added.
Two days
ago, Bolsonaro caused outrage when he suggested the two men had been at fault
for their fate. Amnesty International was among those who responded, describing
Bolsonaro’s comments as “cruel and insensitive”.
A crowdfunding campaign has been launched to
support the families of Dom Phillips and Bruno Pereira. Donate here in
English or here in Portuguese.
.webp)
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