10/11/2006

Newsletter nº 740

The seven jurors of the second trial related to the murder of Vicente Cañas Costa decided, by six votes against one, that the Jesuit missionary was murdered and that clubs or a white weapon (such as a knife) caused his death. However, by five votes against two, the same jurors acquitted the defendant José Vicente da Silva, who had been charged with committing the crime. The result was announced Wednesday (the 8th) night, three days after the beginning of the trial, which was held in the auditorium of the federal court in Cuiabá, state of Mato Grosso, and was presided over by the judge Dr. Jéferson Schneider.


 


The Federal Prosecutor’s Office announced that it will appeal against the sentence, as it did in relation to the trial held between October 24 and 29, when Ronaldo Antonio Osmar was acquitted of the charges of being one of the men who contacted the murderers of the missionary to hire them to kill him at the request of the person who wanted him dead.


 


“When justice is slow to act, it is not effective,” said attorney Mario Lucio Avelar, who coordinated the prosecution, at the end of the trial. “One of the defendants participated in the investigations, only years later they were assigned to the Federal Police, and they were not fast enough. This shows how incompetent the Judiciary and Federal police are. And it also shows that when political and economic interests are involved, they are stronger than local forces,” he said.


 


The assistant prosecuting attorney, Dr. Michael Nolan, agrees that it is difficult to prosecute cases marked by problems since the initial investigations. “There is not a single piece of evidence in the records prepared by the police. They did not produce any evidence,” she said. Evidence was only produced years later through parallel investigations carried out by indigenous entities.


 


The judge in charge of the trial, Jeferson Schneider, said that the proceedings had strengths and weaknesses. “The negative aspect was the time that the case lasted. Everybody knows that the agencies in charge of ensuring justice in Brazil are slow. As a result, values protected by the Federal Constitution, such as the right to life, are disregarded. Proceedings like this one are innocuous. They don’t build a society and make you feel that impunity tends to prevail. The positive side is that the proceedings are finally over. My duty was to complete the process and hold a jury trial. And this was done.”


 


The trial


 


During the discussions which closed the trial, Mario Lucio Avelar tried to prove that there was material evidence that a murder had been committed. He also located the crime in the conflicting context of the city of Juína when it was committed and then described the motive of the crime, namely, that farmers such as Pedro Chiquetti and Camilo Carlos Óbice were interested in indigenous lands. Although they were charged with the crime, both farmers are dead now.


 


Thesis of the prosecutors


 


The defendant José Vicente da Silva worked in the Londrina farm deforesting land, as he said in his deposition on Monday. The Londrina farm is the rural property mentioned in the depositions of the indigenous persons Paulo Tompeba and Adalberto Pito, who heard reports of the murder on two different occasions, both in 1989. José Vicente is the defendant who was accused of being one of the members of the group that killed Cañas at the request of the man who later would become his boss, Pedro Chiquetti.


 


The thesis of the prosecutors is that the group of which José Vicente da Silva was a member reached the shack of the Cimi missionary using a trail that started in the Londrina farm. This trail was only identified in 1990 by indigenous people.


 


“The depositions coincide with the crime scene and confirm that the trail was used by the group to reach the shack,” said Cláudio Comte, who late in the 1980s was hired by the indigenous organization Opan to collect information on the murder after it was seen that the investigations carried out by the police were not advancing, a fact which Comte blames on the involvement of the former chief of police of Juína, Ronaldo Osmar, in the murder. At that time, Cláudio analyzed the diaries kept by missionary Vicente Cañas and found different reports of attempted land invasions in them, many of which had been carried out by another farmer who later on would be indicted in connectgion with the murder, Camilo Carlos Óbice.




 


Pataxó Hã-Hã-Hãe reoccupy four farms in the state of Bahia


 


Two groups of Pataxó Hã-Hã-Hãe families reoccupied four farms in the municipality of Pau Brasil, located in the south region of the state of Bahia, between October 31 and November 1. Today, over 40 families are still refusing to leave the lands, which are part of the 54,100 hectares of the original territory of the Pataxó Hã-Hã-Hãe.


 


Ten days after the reoccupation action, the regional manager of the National Foundation for Indigenous People (Funai) has not shown up to try to begin to negotiate a solution with the farmers who claim to own the lands. The chief of one of the groups, Nailton Muniz, will go to Ilhéus today to request the agency to take measures to solve the conflict. “The head of the Funai station in the area was present on the first day that the lands began to be reoccupied to monitor the removal of cattle from the farms, but he never showed up after that. He also failed to respond to our requests for support and to send us food. People are starving. In such a situation, it will be difficult to resist,” said the outraged chief.


 


So far, the Pataxó Hã-Hã-Hãe have not received any repossession request. Despite the tense climate prevailing in the areas, there were no conflicts. Federal police officers visited one of the farms on the first day with the son of farmer Tito Machado, who wanted to see what was happening in the area.


 


Waiting for two decades


 


The Pataxó Hã-Hã-Hãe have been waiting for 24 years for the Supreme Court to issue a final decision on a lawsuit filed to cancel title deeds to lands where the occupied farms are located, among other properties. “I am very worried, because they have not made any decision in this regard after such a long time,” chief Nailton regrets.  


 


The occupied farms are located in the region of Toucinho, on the border with the old farms São Lucas, Paraíso, Milagrosa and other areas where the Pataxó Hã-Hã-Hãe had been living for many years.


 


Brasília, November 9, 2006.


 


Cimi – Indianist Missionary Council


 

Fonte: Cimi - Assessoria de Imprensa
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