The Guardian (USA)

Outrage as Brazil law threatenin­g Indigenous lands advances in congress

- Tom Phillips in Rio de Janeiro

Indigenous leaders and environmen­talists in Brazil have voiced horror and indignatio­n after lawmakers approved controvers­ial legislatio­n which opponents fear will strike a devastatin­g blow to Indigenous communitie­s and isolated tribes.

Members of Brazil’s conservati­vedominate­d lower house overwhelmi­ngly endorsed bill number 490 on Tuesday night, by 283 votes to 155.

“You will have Indigenous blood on your hands,” the Indigenous congresswo­man Célia Xakriabá told its rightwing backers as leftwinger­s took to the podium to protest by smothering their hands in the red dye of annatto seeds.

Critics say the legislatio­n, which now moves to the senate, poses a series of profound threats to Indigenous communitie­s and the environmen­t:

• It potentiall­y opens the door to road-building, mining, dam constructi­on, agricultur­al projects and the use of geneticall­y modified crops on protected Indigenous lands, as well as authorizin­g contact with isolated Indigenous groups in certain circumstan­ces.

• It would allow the government to reclaim land from Indigenous communitie­s whose “cultural traits” are deemed to have changed.

• Perhaps most damagingly, the legislatio­n would also invalidate Indigenous claims to lands such groups could not prove they physically occupied on the day Brazil’s constituti­on was enacted in October 1988. Activists say that “time limit trick” could scupper scores of legitimate claims for the delimitati­on of Indigenous lands, from groups who had already been evicted from their ancestral lands or whose presence had yet to be recognized at the cut-off date.

The Climate Observator­y watchdog said Brazil’s parliament had witnessed “its most shameful day since the 2016 impeachmen­t of Dilma Rousseff ” – a “show of lies, hatred and racism” which signaled the environmen­tal chaos caused by former president Jair Bolsonaro was far from over.

Lawmakers had sent “a clear message to the country and the world: Bolsonaro is gone but the exterminat­ion [of Indigenous communitie­s and the environmen­t] continues,” the Climate Observator­y added.

Sarah Shenker, a campaigner at human rights group Survival Internatio­nal, said: “This catastroph­ic bill is the most serious attack on Indigenous rights in decades … Hundreds of Indigenous territorie­s home to over a million Indigenous people could be destroyed.”

She added: “There are many examples of uncontacte­d tribes whose existence and location was not yet officially confirmed by government in October 1988 … so if [this] was approved it could be used by anti-Indigenous politician­s who are desperate to steal [such territorie­s].”

When Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva returned to Brazil’s presidency in January there was optimism South America’s largest country was entering a new era of sustainabl­e developmen­t, environmen­tal protection and respect for Indigenous rights. Lula named the veteran environmen­talist Marina Silva as his environmen­t minister and created a ministry for Indigenous peoples run by the Indigenous activist Sônia Guajajara. “We are going to reverse all of the injustices committed against Indigenous peoples,” Lula vowed in his inaugural address, claiming Brazil had a “historic debt” to such groups.

But the rowdy congressio­nal debate that preceded the approval of Bill 490 brought such hopes crashing back down to earth and revealed a starkly divided country.

A succession of white, mostly male lawmakers took the microphone to claim they were supporting the legislatio­n because they considered themselves Indigenous defenders who wanted to help such groups integrate into mainstream society. Many were staunch supporters of Bolsonaro and members of the powerful ruralista bloc linked to agribusine­ss which boasts 302 of the 513 seats in the lower house and 42 of 81 senators.

Bibo Nunes, a congressma­n from Bolsonaro’s rightwing Liberal party (PL), voiced outrage that nearly 14% of Brazil’s territory was in the hands of Indigenous people who represente­d only 0.4% of the population. “What’s the logic? Explain it to me, you lefties!” Nunes bellowed.

Leftist politician­s countered that the legislatio­n would endanger Indigenous lives as well as the global struggle against climate change given the crucial role Indigenous communitie­s have in protecting the Amazon rainforest.

“This is a bill of death, backwardne­ss and regression … This is a crime against Indigenous people,” said Juliana Cardoso, a congresswo­man from Lula’s Worker’s party (PT).

But such arguments were ignored and the bill passed easily.

Guajajara told activists to remain mobilized in the face of what she called “a serious attack on Indigenous people and the environmen­t”. “We will remain steadfast and united, as we always have been,” Lula’s Indigenous minister said in a video message.

 ?? Photograph: Sérgio Lima/AFP/Getty Images ?? An Indigenous woman takes part in a demonstrat­ion against the legislatio­n on Indigenous territorie­s, in Brasília this week.
Photograph: Sérgio Lima/AFP/Getty Images An Indigenous woman takes part in a demonstrat­ion against the legislatio­n on Indigenous territorie­s, in Brasília this week.

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