Illegal miners are increasingly associated with well-armed gangs and operate on protected indigenous reserves, contributing to dire health problems for vulnerable indigenous communities who live there.
IBRAM, which represents giant mining companies in Brazil that include Vale , BHP and Rio Tinto , does not distinguish between legal and illegal informal mining.
The group has suggested Brazilian authorities increase "repression, command and control" of the informal miners. Data from MapBiomas showed informal mining activity overtook industrial mining between 2018 and 2019 for the first time since the turn of the century.
"It is necessary to suffocate, remove, strangle the (mining) market in economic terms for this criminal sector," Jungmann said. The government of Brazil's new President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva has pushed to fight illegal mining, especially in indigenous territories. Last month, the government declared a health emergency on Brazil's largest indigenous reservation that was occupied by over 20,000 miners. Illegal gold mining, which surged during the previous government and is known as "garimpo" in Portuguese, is destroying the environment and the Amazon rainforest, Jungmann said recently. (Reporting by Marta Nogueira; Editing by Chris Reese)