Amazon rift: Five things to know about the dispute between an Indigenous chief and Belgian filmmaker

FILE - British musician and activist Sting, second from right, and Belgian filmmaker Jean-Pierre Dutilleux, right, talk with Menkragnoti Kayap Indigenous Chiefs Paulo Payakan, second from left, and Chief Raoni Metuktire, left, during a five-day meeting in Altamira, Brazil, Feb. 21, 1989. For five decades, the Amazonian tribal chief Raoni Metuktire and Belgian film director Jean-Pierre Dutilleux enlisted presidents and royals, even Pope Francis, to improve the lives of Brazil’s Indigenous peoples and protect their lands. The pair befriended celebrities and movie stars. Sting, the musical legend, was one of their greatest champions. (AP Photo/Miro Nunes, File)

RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — The renowned chief from the Amazon rainforest and the Belgian filmmaker appeared to be close friends at this year's Cannes Film Festival. Far from the flashing cameras, however, their decades-long partnership was nearing its end.

With his feathered crown and wooden lip plate, Chief Raoni of the Kayapo tribe is instantly recognizable the world over. He has met with presidents, royals and celebrities to raise funds for Brazil’s Indigenous peoples and to protect their lands. Almost always in the background was a less familiar face, that of Jean-Pierre Dutilleux, whose documentary about Raoni was a 1979 Oscar nominee. In the years since, he has acted as Raoni's gatekeeper abroad and brokered meetings with leaders and luminaries. But many Kayapo and others who crossed Dutilleux's path harbored growing suspicions about him.

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