20/05/2005

Newsletter nº 664

TUPINIKIM AND GUARANI INDIGENOUS PEOPLE HAVE STARTED TO DEMARCATE THEIR OWN LANDS


 


Around 500 Tupinikim and Guarani indigenous people in the municipality of Aracruz, in the state of Espírito Santo, started to demarcate their own lands last Tuesday (May 17). They want the Minister of Justice, Márcio Thomas Bastos, to guarantee the demarcation of the 18,000 hectares of indigenous lands that have already been recognized in conclusive studies carried out by Funai. Of these 18,000 hectares, 11,000 were excluded through a decision taken by the then Minister of Justice, Íris Resende, and are in the hands of the multinational company Aracruz Celulose. The Tupinikim and Guarani lands are currently being occupied by eucalyptus trees used in the production of cellulose.


 


In March 2005, the Federal Prosecutor’s Office (MPF) in the State of Espírito Santo set up an inquiry to investigate irregularities in the procedures to identify and ratify the Caieiras Velhas, Pau Brasil and Comboios indigenous lands, arguing that the processes did not take into account the anthropological studies undertaken by Funai. The Office has asked for the identification procedures for the three indigenous lands to be declared null and void, so that they can be ratified as a whole. 


 


In 1998, when the indigenous lands were reduced in size, the Tupinikim and Guarani peoples demarcated their own lands but, 8 days later, the Federal Police put a stop to the action. In a letter sent to the Minister of Justice, the indigenous people say that at that moment the Police “closed off access to the villages and took us to Brasília, where without any right to counsel and isolated from our communities, we were obliged to sign an agreement with the company Aracruz Celulose under the threat of losing all the lands, if we did not accept the proposal”.


 


Aracruz Celulose justifies its presence in the indigenous lands based on an agreement signed in 1998. It is the MPF’s view that “the agreement is invalid because the Federal Constitution declares that all civil acts whose object is indigenous land are invalid. The part in the agreement where the indigenous people give up the right to any legal claim to the lands is invalid,” says attorney Luciana L. Oliveira.


 


“We consider this agreement illegal, seeing that because of this we had to accept that Aracruz would continue to make use of 11,009 hectares of the Tupinikim and Guarani lands in exchange for compensation in the form of social projects for a period of 20 years. The illegal nature of the exchange of indigenous lands for money was confirmed by the Brazilian Federal Prosecutor’s Office itself, which withdrew its signature from the agreement back in 1998,” the indigenous people claim in the letter.


 


At the request of Aracruz Celulose, a federal court granted an injunction in favor of repossession of the lands. According to federal police chief Eugênio Ricas, this repossession order will be delivered to Funai this afternoon (19 May). The chief did not say how many police officers would make up the group that was to arrive at the municipality of Aracruz this afternoon.  “We are on a diplomatic mission, this is not a police action,” he said.



 


“CAUSES ARE WHAT MATTER”, SAYS DOM LUCIANO ON RECEIVING TRIBUTE


 


Dom Luciano Mendes de Almeida received tribute this Tuesday (May 17) in Brasília in a Special Session of the Chamber of Deputies. He was president of the National Conference of Bishops of Brazil (CNBB) between 1987 and 1994 and ever since 1989 he has been the Archbishop of the Archdiocese of Mariana, state of Minas Gerais.


 


The bishop played a decisive role in the negotiation process for the Federal Constitution of 1988 and in the episode where the O Estado de S.Paulo newspaper made accusations against Cimi. In 1987, the newspaper published “reports” about the alleged role of religious missions as a front for the interests of foreign mining companies. After six days of articles which directly accused Cimi, CNBB managed to get the Courts to oblige the newspaper to publish the organization’s right of reply.


 


During the tribute in Brasília, which lasted for four hours, Dom Luciano said in a calm and leisurely speech that he found the meaning of solemnity in people’s causes. “I was thinking about the meaning of what we are doing here. And I realized that the causes are what matter: land, work, the indigenous populations, the Negro slaves,” said the bishop. “At this moment I am someone who helps these causes to be present in this house,” he finished. Around 200 Landless Rural Workers connected to the Landless Movement who had walked from Goiânia to Brasília on the National March for Agrarian Reform took part in the Session. Churchgoers and politicians from the Mariana region, in Minas Gerais. were also there.


 


“Your presence has brought me very special happiness and has also created a stronger commitment,” the bishop said, thanking the participants for coming. Dom Luciano also remembered absent friends and militants, including factory worker Santo Dias, the Guarani-Kaiowá Marçal de Souza, and Sister Dorothy Stang.


 


Brasília, 19 May 2005.


 


Cimi – Indianist Missionary Council


 

Fonte: Cimi - Assessoria de Imprensa
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