The documentary film It ‘Tasted’ Like Perfume: Environmental Crimes in Northern Brazil, a Brasil de Fato production, shows the brutal impacts of decades of unaccountable mining operations on the lives of riverside communities in Pará state, in the Brazilian Amazon. Residents of communities such as Burajuba, in the city of Barcarena, struggle as Norsk Hydro-owned mining company Hydro Alunorte (link is external) and French multinational Imerys have been constantly spilling toxic waste into the area’s rivers and streams for decades.
While the 2015 disaster in southeastern Brazil (link is external), where two dams owned by Samarco collapsed and left a trail of over 300 miles of destruction and death, is considered the biggest environmental tragedy in the country’s history, the documentary shows that, in this Pará area, the destruction is slowly killing communities and the environment over the course of many years.
The Barcarena area, where 99,000 people live, has recorded an average of one serious environmental incident every nine months for the last 15 years. Currently, around 26% of Barcarena’s population is less than 15 years old.
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Edition: Brasil de Fato | Translated by Aline Scátola
Brasil de Fato
Source: http://www.mstbrazil.org/video/documentary-exposes-15-years-environmental-crimes-brazilian-amazon