The Guardian (USA)

Costa Rican farmer handed 22 years for murder of Indigenous land defender

- Nina Lakhani and agencies in San José

A Costa Rican court has sentenced a man to 22 years behind bars for the murder of an Indigenous land rights defender in 2020, in a case which stoked decades-old tensions between native communitie­s and farmers over disputed territory.

Yehry Rivera, a leader of the Brörán people, was shot from behind and killed by farmer Juan Varela during a land conflict in the Terraba community, 80 miles (130 km) south-east of the capital San Jose in Puntarenas province.

Rivera, 45, was murdered in February 2020 after being surrounded by a mob of armed non-Indigenous locals amid a spate of violence against Indigenous activists trying to reclaim their ancestral territory.

“I was the one who killed him,” Varela said to cheers and applause at a community meeting last August – comments that were recorded and used as evidence in the trial.

Costa Rica, an eco-tourism hub with 5 million inhabitant­s, is considered Central America’s most equitable and law-abiding country. But in recent years, the Bribri and Brörán people have been subject to a string of violent attacks, racist harassment and trumped-up retaliator­y lawsuits linked to disputes over ancestral lands.

Costa Rica has eight indigenous ethnic groups who represent approximat­ely 2.4% of the total population. In 1977, legislatio­n granted land ownership to Indigenous communitie­s with historical ties to 24 legally recognised territorie­s.

But the law has never been implemente­d.

As a result, the Bribri and Brörán people in the Puntarenas province have in recent years taken matters into their own hands, retaking possession of some land through unauthoriz­ed occupation­s.

Despite some success, most of the territorie­s remain occupied by nonIndigen­ous families and farmers, who also claim ownership of the lands that in some cases have been farmed by their families for generation­s.

The judges in the Rivera case ruled that Varela, who claimed to have Indigenous blood, did not act in self-defence, as argued by his lawyers. Varela can appeal the sentence.

The ruling represents the first sign of justice for Indigenous communitie­s after more than 40 years of occupation by non-Indigenous Costa Ricans, which has led to “systematic violence” by some farmers, the United Nations has said.

Rivera was killed just two weeks after Mainor Ortiz Delgado, 29, a leader of the Bribri indigenous people in neighbouri­ng Salitre, was wounded in a gun attack, and less than a year after Sergio Rojas Ortiz, 59, was shot dead. Both cases remain unsolved.

 ?? Photograph: Juan Carlos Ulate/Reuters ?? Activists take part in a vigil for Rivera in San Jose in February 2020.
Photograph: Juan Carlos Ulate/Reuters Activists take part in a vigil for Rivera in San Jose in February 2020.

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