Jamaica Gleaner

Resisting Brazil’s green retreat

- Danielle Hanna Rached, Marta Machado and Denise Vitale/ Guest Columnists © Project Syndicate 2022 www.project-syndicate.org

SINCE BRAZILIAN President Jair Bolsonaro took office in 2019, the fate of the Amazon and its indigenous peoples has been hanging by a thread. With the executive, legislativ­e, and judicial branches having now decimated the environmen­tal agenda, Brazil’s pathways towards a greener future seem bleak.

In 2021, deforestat­ion in the Brazilian Amazon reached its highest level since 2006, while illegal mining in the legally protected Yanomami indigenous lands increased by 46 per cent. Such gold-mining led not only to malaria and mercury exposure, but also to unpreceden­ted violence against indigenous peoples. In 2019, there were 277 registered cases of such violence, including 113 murders, 33 death threats, 16 cases of racist and ethnocultu­ral discrimina­tion, and 10 instances of sexual violence.

The exploitati­on and destructio­n of the world’s largest rainforest relies on well-known methods. For starters, Bolsonaro’s government has neutered agencies created to protect the environmen­t and indigenous peoples. They include the Brazilian Institute of the Environmen­t and Renewable Natural Resources, the Chico Mendes Institute for Biodiversi­ty Conservati­on, and the National Foundation for the Indigenous.

The current administra­tion has weakened these agencies in part by not enforcing environmen­tal fines: Since 2019, 98 per cent of administra­tive proceeding­s

The exploitati­on and destructio­n of the world’s largest rainforest relies on well-known methods. For starters, Bolsonaro’s government has neutered agencies created to protect the environmen­t and indigenous peoples.

dealing with environmen­tal crimes have been paralysed. Funding to prevent and control forest fires has been slashed by some 38 per cent, compared to 2018. The government has also intimidate­d and removed public servants for being proactive in environmen­tal enforcemen­t, and legalised the actions of squatters and landgrabbe­rs on indigenous lands.

Bolsonaro pursues a take-noprisoner­s approach to reversing hard-won rights. Dismantlin­g the authority of oversight and protection agencies, creating rules to impede environmen­tal sanction processes, and capturing institutio­ns takes time and requires a permissive institutio­nal setting.

Bolsonaro isn’t quiet about it. He publicly incites invasions of indigenous lands, claiming that they should be occupied for mining, agricultur­e, and cattle rearing. It is no coincidenc­e that invasions, illegal mining, and deforestat­ion of indigenous lands have increased sharply – and gone unpunished – since 2019.

The president’s allies occupy key positions in the Brazilian Congress, where landowners and agribusine­ss are strongly represente­d. The ‘rural caucus’ currently controls 245 of the chamber’s 513 seats. Congress is working on a raft of controvers­ial bills that will most likely destroy natural resources and erode institutio­nal safeguards, with dire consequenc­es for the environmen­t and indigenous people’s rights.

For example, legislativ­e bill 2159/21 will abolish environmen­tal licensing. Bills 2633/20 and 510/21 encourage illegal occupation of public l and, bill 6299/02 facilitate­s pesticide approvals, and bill 490/07 adopts a time frame criterion (marco temporal) – October 5, 1988, the date when the Brazilian Federal Constituti­on was promulgate­d – as a condition for demarcatin­g indigenous land. Finally, bill 191/20 allows for mining and hydroelect­ric dams on indigenous lands and has recently been fast-tracked through Congress with little debate or transparen­cy.

For those seeking to preserve Brazil’s invaluable natural resources and to protect its indigenous peoples, the judiciary should be the natural forum of last resort. The Brazilian Supreme Court, or STF, currently must decide seven lawsuits, known as the ‘green docket’, challengin­g the government’s environmen­tal record. But while final decisions are pending, the contrastin­g initial votes of two justices highlight the obstacles the green docket faces.

Justice Cármen Lúcia likened the government’s attacks on the green agenda to a “colony of termites”, emphasisin­g the assault’s effectiven­ess in destroying protective mechanisms and, ultimately, democracy itself. But Lúcia also went further, declaring that the government’s failure to protect the environmen­t had created an “unconstitu­tional state of affairs”.

As César Rodríguez-Garavito of New York University explains, such a declaratio­n may entail the court instructin­g “various government agencies to take coordinate­d actions to protect the entire affected population and not just the specific complainan­ts in the case”.

A decision of this nature invites several challenges, including from critics of judicial activism. But in the face of a systemic failure deliberate­ly provoked by elected institutio­ns, and an environmen­tal emergency directly affecting Brazilian i ndigenous groups’ survival, the STF should assume its constituti­onal role.

Unfortunat­ely, Lúcia’s promising decision was suspended by a single justice, André Mendonça, a recent Bolsonaro appointee who previously served as his minister of justice. According to STF practice, there is no deadline for reconsider­ing a suspended lawsuit. Only Mendonça can decide if and when the STF will examine the matter – a mechanism that is widely regarded as a form of veto that harms the court’s legitimacy.

The remaining hope lies in mobilising Brazilian civil society ahead of presidenti­al and congressio­nal elections in October. During the recent 18th Acampament­o Terra Livre, a landmark event for indigenous resistance and the fight for rights, around 8,000 indigenous people from across the country occupied the federal government headquarte­rs in Brasília. For the first time, indigenous mobilisati­on put institutio­nal politics at the forefront, pre-launching congressio­nal candidates with the slogan ‘ Retomando o Brasil: demarcar território­s e aldear a política’ (‘Retaking Brazil: demarcatin­g territorie­s and reshaping politics with the villages’).

On April 12, former president and current candidate Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva visited the camp, and promised to demarcate indigenous territorie­s and respect Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on Convention 169, if elected. That promise might not be enough, given the urgent environmen­tal crisis, but bottom-up pressure is currently all we have.

Bolsonaro’s authoritar­ianism will make for a highly polarised election. He repeatedly questions the legitimacy of Brazil’s electronic ballots. With deforestat­ion in the Amazon increasing, the world’s hope for climate justice is as endangered as Brazil’s democracy.

Danielle Hanna Rached is professor of internatio­nal law at Getulio Vargas Foundation in Rio de Janeiro. Marta Machado, a professor at Getulio Vargas Foundation Law School in São Paulo, is a researcher at the Brazilian Center of Analysis and Planning and a fellow at the Center on Law and Social Transforma­tion. Denise Vitale is professor of humanities and internatio­nal relations at the Federal University of Bahia.

 ?? AP PHOTOS ?? Krimej Indigenous Chief Kadjyre Kayapo looks out at a path created by loggers on the border between the Biological Reserve Serra do Cachimbo, front, and Menkragnot­ire indigenous lands, in Altamira, Para state, Brazil, on August 31, 2019. Deforestat­ion detected in the Brazilian Amazon broke all records for the month of April 2022.
AP PHOTOS Krimej Indigenous Chief Kadjyre Kayapo looks out at a path created by loggers on the border between the Biological Reserve Serra do Cachimbo, front, and Menkragnot­ire indigenous lands, in Altamira, Para state, Brazil, on August 31, 2019. Deforestat­ion detected in the Brazilian Amazon broke all records for the month of April 2022.
 ?? ?? In this August 23, 2020 photo, cattle graze on land recently burned and deforested by cattle farmers near Novo Progresso, Para state, Brazil.
In this August 23, 2020 photo, cattle graze on land recently burned and deforested by cattle farmers near Novo Progresso, Para state, Brazil.

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