Mato Grosso
Chief Raoni Metuktire, the ethnic Kayapo leader who became a symbol of the fight for Indigenous rights and the preservation of the Amazon rainforest in Brazil, has recovered from an illness after being in hospital for 10 days, a doctor said. Raoni had been taken to a private hospital in Sinop, a city in Mato Grosso state in western Brazil, from his home in the Xingu Indigenous reservation after suffering diarrhoea and dehydration, said his great-nephew, Patxon Metuktire. Raoni had tested negative for the new coronavirus.
The Kayapo ethnic leader, thought to be around 90 years old, said at a press conference: “Now I’m healed. I wanted to tell you that disease comes at any time.
“Think about it and love and respect each other because we don’t know tomorrow. The disease does not warn when it comes.”
Raoni “is still a little weak, but already strong enough to continue to lead his people”, said Dr Douglas Yanai.
He added that Raoni had been formally discharged but would leave the hospital later on Saturday while logistics for his trip home are arranged. According to the doctor, Raoni was suffering low blood pressure and anaemia.—AFP