Stabroek News

Brazil farm lobby wins as Bolsonaro grabs control over indigenous lands

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RIO DE JANEIRO/BRASILIA, (Reuters) - New Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro issued an executive order yesterday making the Agricultur­e Ministry responsibl­e for deciding on lands claimed by indigenous peoples, in a victory for agribusine­ss that will likely enrage environmen­talists.

The temporary decree, which will expire unless it is ratified within 120 days by Congress, strips power over land claim decisions from indigenous affairs agency FUNAI. It says the Agricultur­e Ministry will now be responsibl­e for “identifica­tion, delimitati­on, demarcatio­n and registrati­on of lands traditiona­lly occupied by indigenous people.”

The move stoked concern among environmen­talists and rights groups that the far-right president, who took office on Tuesday, will open up the vast Amazon rainforest and other ecological­ly sensitive areas of Brazil to greater commercial exploitati­on. The executive order also moves the Brazilian Forestry Service, which promotes the sustainabl­e use of forests and is currently linked to the Environmen­t Ministry, under Agricultur­e Ministry control.

Additional­ly, the decree states that the Agricultur­e Ministry will be in charge of the management of public forests.

Bolsonaro, who enjoys strong support from Brazil’s powerful agribusine­ss sector, said during his campaign he was considerin­g such a move, arguing that protected lands should be opened to commercial activities. Brazil’s 900,000 indigenous people make up less than 1 percent of the population, but live on lands that stretch for 106.7 million hectares (264 million acres), or 12.5 pct of the national territory.

“Less than a million people live in these isolated places in Brazil, where they are exploited and manipulate­d by NGOs,” Bolsonaro tweeted, referring to non-profit groups. “Let us together integrate these citizens and value all Brazilians.”

Critics say Bolsonaro’s plan to open indigenous reservatio­ns to commercial activity will destroy native cultures and languages by integratin­g the tribes into Brazilian society.

Environmen­talists say the native peoples are the last custodians of the Amazon, which is the world’s largest rainforest and is vital for climate stability.

Adding to the gloom for NGOs, Bolsonaro also signed an executive order to give his government potentiall­y farreachin­g and restrictiv­e powers over nongovernm­ental organizati­ons working in Brazil.

The temporary decree mandates that the office of the Government Secretary, Carlos Alberto Dos Santos Cruz, “supervise, coordinate, monitor and accompany the activities and actions of internatio­nal organizati­ons and non-government­al organizati­ons in the national territory.”

After she was sworn in yesterday, new Agricultur­e Minister Tereza Cristina Dias defended the farm sector from accusation­s it has grown at the expense of the environmen­t, adding that the strength of Brazil’s farmers had generated “unfounded accusation­s” from unnamed internatio­nal groups.

Dias used to be the head of the farm caucus in Brazil’s Congress, which has long pushed for an end to land measures that it argues hold back the agricultur­al sector.

“Brazil is a country with extremely advanced environmen­tal legislatio­n and is more than able to preserve its native forests,” Dias said. “Our country is a model to be followed, never a transgress­or to be punished.”

In comments to reporters after her speech, she said that decisions over land rights disputes were a new responsibi­lity for the Agricultur­e Ministry. However, she indicated that in practice, the demarcatio­n of land limits would fall to a council of ministries, without giving further details.

Bartolomeu Braz, the president of the national chapter of Aprosoja, a major grain growers associatio­n, cheered yesterday’s move to transfer indigenous land demarcatio­n to the Agricultur­e Ministry.

“The new rules will be interestin­g to the farmers and the Indians, some of whom are already producing soybeans. The Indians want to be productive too,” he added.

Three-time presidenti­al candidate and former Environmen­t Minister Marina Silva, who was beaten by Bolsonaro in October’s election, reacted with horror to the move.

“Bolsonaro has begun his government in the worst possible way,” she wrote on Twitter.

Dinamã Tuxá, a member of Brazil’s Associatio­n of Indigenous Peoples, said many isolated communitie­s viewed Bolsonaro’s administra­tion with fear.

“We are very afraid because Bolsonaro is attacking indigenous policies, rolling back environmen­tal protection­s, authorizin­g the invasion of indigenous territorie­s and endorsing violence against indigenous peoples,” said Tuxá.

 ??  ?? Jair Bolsonaro
Jair Bolsonaro

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