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- From: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel)
- Subject: Brazil: Indigenous people under siege
- Message-ID: <1993Jan23.091528.16022@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Organization: PACH
- Date: Sat, 23 Jan 1993 09:15:28 GMT
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-
- /** reg.samerica: 368.0 **/
- ** Topic: IPS:BRASIL-Indifenous people under **
- ** Written 6:36 pm Jan 19, 1993 by jbinder in cdp:reg.samerica **
- From: James Binder <jbinder>
- Subject: IPS:BRASIL-Indifenous people under siege
-
- Copyright Inter Press Service 1993, all rights reserved. Permission to re-
- print within 7 days of original date only with permission from 'newsdesk'.
-
- Title: BRAZIL: Indigenous people under siege by land grabbers
-
- london, january 16 (ips/candy gourlay) -- brazil's indigenous
- peoples are being abducted, tortured and killed for their land,
- the human rights watchdog amnesty international says in a new
- report.
-
- amnesty accused brazilian officials of ''colluding'' with
- perpetrators of such crimes by consistently failing to investigate
- reports or bring the criminals to justice.
-
- the report documents abuses against a range of brazil's
- indigenous communities, from the macux in roraima to the uru-eu-
- wau-wau of central rondonia.
-
- most abuses catalogued were motivated by land disputes. ''as the
- pressure for minerals and timber increases, indigenous groups
- become more vulnerable to armed attack,'' amnesty says.
-
- ''these attacks are often carried out by private agents,
- including gunmen hired by land claimants, timber merchants or
- mining interests. they have gone almost entirely unpunished -- in
- fact, state level authorities have even colluded with them.''
-
- amnesty is careful to distance itself from the disputes
- themselves, but points out ''the persistent failure of successive
- governments to protect the fundamental human rights of brazil's
- indigenous peoples''.
-
- by failing to arbitrate promptly in disputes between indigenous
- and non-indigenous peoples, the state has allowed violence to
- escalate with impunity, the report says.
-
- the reported abuses fly in the face of official brazilian
- acknowledgement of the focal role land plays in the survival of
- indigenous people. in 1991, the government itself coined the
- slogan ''indian is land'' to signal its recognition of indigenous
- land rights.
-
- the 1988 constitution proclaims recognition of the indians'
- ''original land rights to the lands they traditionally occupy''
- and pledge that these lands would be ''demarcated'' and
- ''protected''. the government indian agency 'funai' is charged
- with the demarcation of the approximately 50 percent of indian
- lands yet unprotected.
-
- yet commercial pressures have made these same lands the target of
- private agents who use violence to push aside their
- occupants. ''in reality, most indian lands whether demarcated or
- not are coveted for some form of development,'' the report says.
-
- mineral concessions have been made on 58 percent of all
- demarcated indian lands, while 13 percent are affected by hydro-
- electric projects, according to a 1986 report by the ecumenical
- centre for documentation and information (cedi) and the brazilian
- national geologists association (conage). (more/ips)
-
- brazil: indigenous people under siege by land grabbers(2-e)
-
- official figures put brazil's indigenous population at 250,000,
- divided into 180 different ethnic groups with 170 languages. the
- groups range from populations of 20,000, such as the ticuna
- indians, to groups as small as 10.
-
- ''the small size of these indigenous groups means that the loss
- of life of a few of their members may have proportionately
- devastating effect on their very survival,'' says the report,
- which was written after six months of field research by an amnesty
- task force.
-
- now, whole communities are at risk as ''case after case'' of
- reported human rights abuse against indigenous people go
- unchallenged by brazilian authorities.
-
- the report describes indigenous communities as ''in a state of
- siege''. the report describes the situation of 35-five-year-old
- damiao mendes, a macuxi indian, who was found lying face down on a
- muddy river bank, shot in the neck. nearby lay his 19-year-old
- nephew, mario davis, similarly slain.
-
- opposition of local ranchers had stalled the demarcation of land
- belonging to mendes' community of macuxi indians, a semi-nomadic
- group whose ancestral lands lie on the plains of roraima. their
- claim to the land has resulted in attacks by cattle ranchers, who
- have so far succeeded in forcing many to abandon their traditional
- territorial grasslands.
-
- ''the basic facts of this case are far from exceptional,'' the
- report says. ''damiao mendes and mario davis were killed for land.
- the investigation into the killing was cursory. no one has been
- brought to justice. dozens of indians in brazil have been murdered
- in similar circumstances.''
-
- in some cases, police forces allegedly take part in unauthorised
- raids on indian areas, subjecting men, women and children to
- beatings and ill-treatment, the report says.
-
- amnesty called for an ''end to impunity'', demanding that
- authorities at all levels ensure that private bodies which have
- contact with indigenous peoples fully respect their human rights.
- should abuses occur, they must be promptly investigated and
- perpetrators brought to justice, the report said.
-
- amnesty also called for special care to ensure the safety of
- ''newly contacted'', previously isolated indigenous communities.
-
- the ''speedy and just resolution'' of unresolved land conflicts
- would massively reduce the incidence of human rights abuse against
- indigenous people, the report says.
-
- the report, published friday by amnesty's london-based
- international secretariat, is the first to mark the united nations
- international year of the world's indigenous peoples.
- (end/ips/en/cg/mf/93)
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.samerica **
-