According to the
report, "Violence Against Indigenous People in Brazil," recently
published by the Indigenous Missionary Council (CIMI), the number of indigenous
people killed in the country grew 42 percent from 2013 to 2014; 138 cases were
officially registered. The majority of the murders were carried out by hit men
hired by those with economic interests in the territories. In an effort to make
way for new investment projects, the Brazilian government and transnational
corporations have been taking over ancestral indigenous lands, triggering a
rise in murders of indigenous people in Brazil.
In addition to this, there has been a steady flow of people
forced to move to small territories after being displaced by economic
development projects, as in the case of the state of Mato Grosso do Sul, where
the majority of the population - over 40,000 people - live concentrated on
small reservations. These are communities that are exposed to assassinations by
hired hit men, lack education and basic necessities, and endure deplorable
health conditions. Infant mortality rates in the community are high and rising:
According to official statistics, last year 785 children between the ages of 0
and 5 died. A report, titled "Projects that impact indigenous lands,"
released by CIMI in 2014, revealed that at least 519 projects have impacted 437
ancestral territories, directly affecting 204 indigenous groups. The energy
sector has most deeply affected indigenous people; of the 519 documented
projects, 267 are energy-related. In second place is infrastructure, with 196
projects. Mining is third, with 21 projects, and in fourth place, with 19 expansive
projects, is agribusiness. Ecotourism comes next with 9 projects. According to
research carried out by Ricardo Verdum at the Center for the Study of
Indigenous Populations at the Federal University in the state of Santa
Catarina, of the 23 hydroelectric dams that will be built in the Amazon, at
least 16 will have negative social and environmental effects on indigenous
territories. They will destroy the environmental conditions that these
indigenous groups depend on to live and maintain their way of life.
"In the Amazon region, the region of the Tapajos River,
we are being fenced in," João Tapajó - a member of the Arimun indigenous
group - told Truthout. "The Teles waterway is being constructed and the
BR163 highway widened. This is being done to transport the transnational
corporations' grain and minerals," added Tapajó, who is part of one of the
groups that make up the Indigenous Movement of the region Bajo Tapajós, in the
state of Pará. "We live under constant threat from agribusinesses and
lumber companies. There is a construction project to build five hydroelectric
dams on the same river. To top it off, our region is suffering from a process
of prospecting for the exploitation of minerals, by the companies Alcoa y Vale
do Rio Doce."
The states of Mato Grosso del Sur, Amazonas and Bahía figure
heavily in the statistics. An emblematic case was the brutal killing of the
indigenous woman Marinalva Kaiowá, in November of 2014. She lived in recovered
territories, land that for over 40 years has been claimed by the Guaraní people
as the land of their ancestors. Marinalva was assassinated - stabbed 35 times -
two weeks after attending a protest with other indigenous leaders at the
Federal Supreme Court in the Federal District of Brasilia. The group was
protesting a court ruling that annulled the demarcation process in the
indigenous territory of the Guyraroká.
"We, the Guaraní, principally from Mato Grosso do Sul,
have been the greatest victims of massacres and violence," the Guaraní
Kaiowá indigenous leader Araqueraju told Truthout. "They have killed many
of our leaders, they have spilled much blood because we are fighting for the
respect for and demarcation of what is left of our territories that the
government does not want to recognize."
Capitalism has no interest in the health, safety or welfare
of people or the environment. Its only interests are profits - this is why our planet
is in such peril.
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-34166666
ReplyDeleteMembers of the Guarani-Kaiowa indigenous community in western Brazil say they have come under attack from local farmers. A group of armed men in about 30 vehicles drove onto their land in the state of Mato Grosso do Sul and began to shoot randomly. Prosecutors have opened an investigation into allegations that local farmers have set up a militia to fight the indigenous groups in Mato Grosso do Sul.
Guarani-Kaiowa occupied five ranches on 22 August. The tribe says those are their ancestral lands, which had been stolen.