Indigenous rights in Brazil

Brazil is home to around 900,000 indigenous people. Indigenous people still face discrimination and repression in a variety of ways and are under continual pressure from the powerful agribusiness and other industry lobbies. The election of far-right President Jair Bolsonaro threatens potential catastrophe for Brazil’s indigenous population.

Last updated 4 August 2020

Indigenous rights under threat

Brazil is home to around 900,000 indigenous people, according to Survival International, around 0.4% of the country’s population. Like other indigenous peoples of the Americas, they were subject to mass genocide and dispossession at the hands of European colonial settlers which has continued to the present. Despite rights granted by the Brazilian constitution, and the demarcation of areas of the country as native lands, the UN and the Inter-American Commission condemned abuses of indigenous rights in Brazil in 2017.

Indigenous people still face discrimination and repression in a variety of ways, in particular a lack of access to justice, the very slow pace of land demarcation, and the criminalization of allied NGOs.

They are under continual pressure from the powerful agribusiness and other industry lobbies that seeks to open up more indigenous land to mining, logging, rubber plantations, and deforestation, which would have a devastating effect on indigenous peoples there. Violent attacks against indigenous people by those seeking to exploit and steal their land are common, as are murders of environmental defenders.

The election of far-right President Jair Bolsonaro threatens potential catastrophe for Brazil’s indigenous population. Bolsonaro has frequently expressed his hatred of indigenous people, and has promised to abolish the indigenous rights agency FUNAI, and end demarcation of native land. Sadly, these fears appear to be already being fulfilled: in the first two months after Bolsonaro took office, attacks on indigenous people increased, including four murders.

Related Content


By Victormferreira CC BY-SA 4.0 on Wikimedia Commons

Jair Bolsonaro

Jair Bolsonaro is a fascist. His election has given rise to grave fears among large sections of Brazilian society, and threatens to undermine Brazil's democratic progress since the end of military rule in 1985.

Posters on a pavement about repression in Brazil

Repression in the Favelas

Many poor, urban communities in Brazil, especially the Favelas of Rio de Janeiro, have been subject to severe armed violence at the hands of drug gangs, paramilitary militias formed in opposition to these gangs, and the police and armed forces.


Credit: Alexandre Durão/Revista Força Aérea CC BY-SA 2.0 on Flickr

Brazil’s arms suppliers

Brazil's arms come from a range of international suppliers, as well as its domestic arms industry. It was the 35th biggest importer of major conventional weapons between 2009-2018.

CAAT would not exist without its supporters. Each new supporter helps us strengthen our call for an end to the international arms trade.

Keep in touch