NEWS FROM
BRAZIL
supplied by Brazil Justice Net
Number 609, May 11, 2009
In this week's News from Brazil:
Transnationals:
New Elements for Old Land Crimes
The large landowners used to rule, but today in their place are the big
corporations who are behind concentration of land ownership and
violence in the rural areas.
By Patrícia Benvenuti,
An ambush on April 16th, 2009, carried out by agents of a private
security company left 7 rural workers wounded on the Espirito Santo
Ranch in the municipality of Xinguara, Para. Armed with
high-powered weapons, the private security force shot at members of the
MST (Movement of rural workers Without Land) who since February have
been encamped in the area.
The incident was almost a repeat of another massacre—Eldorado
dos Carajas, which by coincidence also occurred in Para on almost the
same day, April 17th (1996). On that day, 19 MST members were
killed and dozens more wounded after a conflict with the Military
Police who were trying to control the protestors.
The recent assassination attempts in Xinguara demonstrates that the
violence, with new characteristics, committed in Eldorado dos Carajas
continues. According to the most recent study
“Conflicts in the Brazilian Countryside,” released
by the CPT (the Catholic Church’s Land Commission) on April
28, conflicts continue to be a constant factor for millions of rural
workers, indigenous peoples, quilombolas [descendants of runaway
slaves] and other rural populations.
New Faces, Old Practices
In addition to the recurring violence in rural areas which already
seems to be part of the structural formation of the country, the
advancement of big economic conglomerates in the competition for land
gives way to new forms of violence.
If in the past ranchers used the service of gunmen, this work today is
more in the hands of private security companies who act as the real hit
men in defending properties. So “big international
companies end up adopting the practices of [the old]
‘colonel’ system, contracting private
militia,” said Jucilino Jose Strozake, a lawyer for the MST.
In the Amazon, this practice is actually being recommended by members
of public offices. “Farm groups and the CNA
(Confederation of Agriculture and Livestock of Brazil), through Senator
Katia Abreu, and other pro-farm officials have consistently told
farmers that the have to hire private security and protect at all costs
their lands,” said Jose Batisat Afonso, lawyer and member of
the CPT.
To the contrary of what should be, hiring these security firms instead
of gunmen does not mean improvement nor more transparency in relation
to the violence in rural areas. According to Afonso, the
majority of these firms do not even have their own
regulations. This makes it difficult, for example, to control
the actual number of weapons that each company possesses.
Besides this, the lack of oversight allows for the possibility of
contracting gunmen to move people off properties. Far from
disuse, the practice of hired gunmen is still popular, especially in
the north of the country
“A company sometimes has X number of legally contracted
security guards, and in these actions, they also include gunmen totally
from the outside. This should necessitate a direct
investigation of the Federal Police regarding these
practices,” said Afonso.
The Focus on the Amazon
In spite of the fact that all Brazilian regions have elevated indices
of concentration of land ownership and consequently violence, in the
Amazon the situation is most alarming. According to the CPT
study, in 2008, 47% of the conflicts occurred in the Amazon, and more
than half of these conflicts directly affected traditional
communities. In addition, 72% of all of the assassinations
happened in this region—in Para alone were 13 of the 28
assassinations.
In Afonso’s opinion, the increase of violence in the Amazon
is evidently linked to the new actors in the Brazil land
stage: international businesses and large
conglomerates. If in the past the large land holdings were
represented by the figure of the “coronel,” this
role is now occupied by big economic groups who continue to acquire
land for the expansion of their capital.
The focus is on the Amazon because of the vast natural resources the
region possesses, especially given the fact that prices of products
such as soy, beef, and minerals are rising in the international
market. “Without a doubt, the intensification of
the livestock market, the expansion of monocultures such as soy, and
the mining operations have provoked a wave of violence in the direction
of the resources of the Amazon,” commented Afonso.
An example of this is the group Opportunity, owned by banker Daniel
Dantas who alone bought nearly 500,000 hectares in the south of Para in
only two years. The case of Opportunity also serves to
illustrate the irregular acquisition of public lands in the
region. Currently there is a lawsuit pending for the
cancellation of the sale of the Espirito Santo Ranch. The
title to the lands, which belong to the state of Para, were illegally
given to the Multran family. In the state of Para alone, more
than 6,000 land titles are registered with irregularities, according to
Iterpa (Institute of Lands in Para). These titles represent
110 million hectares of land, some of which illegally possessed.
A Look at Traditional Communities
Taking a closer look at the violence against traditional populations,
according to the CPT study, in 2007, these communities represented 41%
of those involved in land conflicts in Brazil. In 2008, these
this index rose to 53%, reducing the percentage of those involved in
landless movements who were until then the principal targets of
violence. Specifically in the Amazon, traditional
communities today represent 65.4% of those involved in conflicts,
showing the greed that capital has for new areas.
“Populations such as river folk, indigenous, and quilombolas
are seeing their lands being invaded, destroyed and will suffer the
effects of contamination of these big investors who are taking away the
lands of these people who have lived here for a long time,”
asserted Afonso.
Besides traditional populations, the violence also affects people who
move to the Amazon with the promise of jobs offered by companies doing
big construction projects. Here, Afonso also criticizes the
federal government in its PAC (Program for Accelerated Growth), which
has contributed to the migration of poor families, especially from the
Northeast. “In the region, for example, of the
south and southeast of Para, the migration is happening because of the
mining projects begun by Companhia Vale, and by the damming projects
that are a part of PAC in the interests of these big economic
groups. When they arrive, not having any alternatives, the
migrants become part of either two movements, either the occupation of
urban lands or the occupation or rural lands. [which inevitably will
involve conflict]”
Regional Differences
Although the forms of violence change from region to region, the
assassination of leaders, evictions, attacks by militia, use
of slave labor and other violations of human rights are present in all
states. What differs is the degree of violence, which is much
higher in regions where capital has interests, as is currently the case
with the Amazon. “Where there is capital, which in
some ways is undoubtedly consolidated in the South-Central and South of
the country, there is violence, but less [in these regions] because
these are regions where capital already has control of almost all of
the land,” asserted Afonso.
Economic interests are also a factor which can influence how the
military police, commanded by the state governments, act. For
Strozake, these interests explain why some police forces can be more
violent that others. In the state of Para, for example, under
the leadership of state governor Ana Julia Carepa (Workers’
Party), the military police now attempts to handle conflicts in a less
aggressive fashion. But in Rio Grande do Sul, under the
leadership of governor Yeda Crusius, violence has increased against
rural workers’ organizations and movements.
“It depends greatly on who is leading the state. If
it is someone who is subservient to the interests of big business or
large landowners, the military police also begins to act as the armed
force of the local economic powers,” commented Strozake.
Source: Brasil de Fato, May 7, 2009
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