The mayor of Manaus, located on the Amazon river, where mass graves of coronavirus victims have been dug, issued a plea for help from young environmental campaigner Greta Thunberg on Sunday.
"My very dear Greta Ernman Thunberg... I'm telling you that we are needing help. We have to save the lives of the protectors of the forest", Mayor Arthur Virgílio Neto said in a video message.
"We are in front of a disaster, something like barbarism," he added.
The Mayor of Manaus, Arthur Virgílio Neto, has asked for Greta Thunberg's help to "save the lives of the protectors of the forest" from #COVID19.
— Global Analytica (@AnalyticaGlobal) May 3, 2020
For the latest videos, head here: https://t.co/8ETqEuqsL9 pic.twitter.com/iXPSqYdZWI
A spike in cases in the city has seen hospitals, emergency responders, and cemeteries overwhelmed since April as the coronavirus outbreak continues to plague the city.
The city, found in Brazil's Amazonas region and at the heart of the rainforest, has become a COVID-19 hotspot in Brazil, with 3,941 cases and 357 deaths as of Friday.
Thunberg has yet to respond to the message but on the same day she indirectly mentioned Brazil on social media when she retweeted a post about indigenous people being disproportionately affected by COVID-19 and pledged to #defendthedefenders.
This is completely unacceptable. The situation in the Amazon during the corona pandemic is truly alarming in many ways.
— Greta Thunberg (@GretaThunberg) May 2, 2020
We must #DefendTheDefenders of the forest. There can be no climate justice without indigenous rights. https://t.co/JnYEslCav8
Over 6,700 people have died from the virus in Brazil, overtaking China where the outbreak began, according to Johns Hopkins University. President Jair Bolsonaro, has dismissed the crisis, describing it as a "little flu" and has encouraged businesses to reopen.