Brazil
land disputes spread as Indians take on wildcat miners
As
Brazil struggles to solve land disputes between Indians and farmers
on the expanding frontier of its agricultural heartland, more
tensions over forest and mineral resources are brewing in the remote
Amazon.
17
February, 2014
The
government of President Dilma Rousseff gave eviction notices to
hundreds of non-Indian families in the Awá-Guajá reserve in
Maranhão state in January and plans to relocate them by April, with
the help of the army if necessary, Indian affairs agency Funai says.
The
court order to clear the Awá territory follows the forced removal of
some 7,000 soy farmers and cattle ranchers from the Marãiwatsédé
Xavante reservation last year, a process profiled by Reuters that
resulted in violent clashes.
Anthropologists
say evictions from Awá territory could be even more complicated. It
is thought to be a base for criminal logging operations and is also
home to some indigenous families who have never had contact with
outsiders, a combination that worries human rights groups lobbying
for the evictions.
The
government missed a federal judge's deadline to start carrying out
the evictions last year but began ordering them after a high-profile
campaign backed by the likes of actor Colin Firth.
Now,
other tribes from the Amazon as well as the long-settled soy belt are
lobbying to have non-Indians removed from their lands or have new
reservations created at the same time Rousseff's leftist government,
faced with a sputtering economy in an election year, is trying to
build dams, expand farmland and otherwise spur growth.
South
America's largest country is still grappling with unresolved
indigenous land issues more than a century after the United States
finished carving out Indian reservations and has become one of the
world's clearest examples of the conflict between preserving
indigenous culture and promoting economic development.
"The
Indians are showing ever increasing persistence in asserting their
rights, which will likely increase conflicts with outsiders
interested in their lands," said Rubem Almeida, a Brazilian
anthropologist.
The
federal government says it is strictly following the law and is
taking pains to relocate non-Indian settlers when it removes them
from indigenous territories. Each conflict is unique and requires a
different approach, said Paulo Maldos, a senior presidential aide who
works on social policy.
"The
only thing they have in common is the constitution, which says we
must demarcate Indian territory and that land titles inside
indigenous land are null," he said.
"The
Indians know where their lands are and are never going to stop trying
to return to them; they have a very special relationship with the
land."
TRIBE
TAKES ON WILDCAT MINERS
Take
the Munduruku tribe in western Pará, a vast Amazon state that
stretches to Brazil's coast and is more than twice the size of
France.
Their
more than 2 million-hectare (4.9 million-acre) slice of protected
rain forest is being encroached on by efforts to dam the Tapajós
river, build new roads for exporting soy and corn crops, and
especially by wildcat miners in search of gold.
The
tribe's leaders, who refer to themselves as warriors, traveled to the
capital Brasilia last year to demand that the federal government
remove non-indigenous miners from their territory.
Rather
than wait for a court decision to start the process, which took years
for the Xavante and Awá, the Munduruku decided to take matters into
their own hands and expel the wildcat miners in January.
Miners
operating without government licenses independent of large companies
are common in both the Brazilian and Peruvian Amazon. They are known
for using high levels of mercury that pollute local water sources.
A
group of 70 Munduruku were about to dismantle a fifth wildcat mine by
sneaking up on the outposts on boats they said were supplied by Funai
when Reuters visited them in mid-January. Armed with bows and arrows,
they outnumbered the miners and were able to take over without anyone
being hurt - this time.
The
Munduruku have not yet decided what to do with the mining equipment
they confiscated.
"The
machinery will be idle for a month," Chief Paigomuyatpu Manhuary
said. "After that, the people will decide whether we close the
mine or work the ones in places where the jungle has already been
cleared, for the benefit of the community."
Tribal
leaders also plan to resist the construction of the Teles Pires and
Tapajós hydroelectric dams in Mato Grosso and Pará states. They
have previously joined other tribes in protesting Belo Monte, which
will be the world's third-largest dam and flood large swaths of the
Amazon once complete.
The
government says indigenous groups are consulted before energy
projects that affect them are built, in accordance with international
law.
HIRED
HIT MEN
The
Munduruku are sometimes called upon to do heavy labor for the miners,
known as garimpeiros, in exchange for food, a small amount of gold or
small sums of money, tribe members told Reuters. They also fear they
may already be the targets of hired hit men.
Indians
across Brazil say non-indigenous presence in their territories
threatens their safety and unique culture, both of which are
supposedly protected in the constitution. The farm lobby in Congress
wants to amend the constitution to limit the amount of land that can
be reserved for indigenous people.
The
constitution, written in 1988 shortly after Brazil emerged from a
military dictatorship, enshrined the Indians' right to "the
lands they traditionally occupy," and said the state is
responsible for "demarcating them, protecting and ensuring
respect of their property."
The
Munduruku's fears echo those of the Guarani-Kaiowá Indians 2,000 km
(1,240 miles) away in Mato Grosso do Sul state. They say they often
receive death threats from ranchers and that they have been denied
access to their ancestral territory, which is also occupied by sugar
cane plantations.
The
cattle ranchers have argued that they must protect private property
from invading Indians who claim the land as ancestral. In Mato Grosso
do Sul, many ranchers have legitimate titles on lands that overlap
with Indian territory. The government has said it is trying to buy
some of the properties at the center of the conflict.
Last
month, a local court ordered private security firm Gaspem to be shut
done on the grounds it was really a front for hit men hired by
ranchers to kill Indians. Public prosecutors called Gaspem a "heavily
armed group of brutal vigilantes." But many are skeptical that
shutting it down will end the violence.
"The
conflict will not end until the government finds a solution to the
Guarani land problem," said Almeida, the anthropologist.
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