Kuwait Times

Brazil’s indigenous tribes protest against land theft

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Fed up with endless encroachme­nt on their ancestral lands, leaders of Brazil’s many indigenous tribes went to the capital Brasilia to speak out this week. But they had trouble finding anyone to listen. More than 3,000 tribal members massed on the esplanade outside the government complex in Brasilia for the 14th annual “Free lands” event.

But their freedom had limits: when they tried to approach Congress on Tuesday, they were pushed back in clouds of tear gas.”They’re prejudiced,” said Alvaro Tucano, one of the tribal members taking part in a week-long camp outside the government complex. “I have never seen such a conservati­ve Congress as the one there is today.” The clash provided surreal scenes of men in traditiona­l headdresse­s with bows and arrows facing off against blackclad riot police.

Those who were there say the contrast reflected the permanent disconnect between Brazil’s state and the descendant­s of the country’s original inhabitant­s. Nearly 900,000 indigenous tribe members currently live in Brazil, or 0.4 percent of the entire population, divided into 305 ethnic groups. The statistic that matters most, however, is the 12 percent of Brazil their recognized lands cover, much of it in the Amazon. Although most of the world sees the region as one of the planet’s greatest natural wonders, the powerful Brazilian agricultur­al industry values the sparsely populated lands mainly for logging and converting to farmland for soy and cattle.

The government is committed to protecting those lands-in theory. But the fact that many of the borders are not officially demarcated effectivel­y deprives the tribal members of legal rights. The result is constant pressure on the indigenous peoples and frequent clashes. At least 137 tribal people were murdered in 2015, according to the Indigenous Missionary Council, run by the Catholic Church. The number of those killed since 2003 reaches above 890.

To their chagrin, the official ultimately responsibl­e for protecting vulnerable indigenous groups in the country’s conservati­ve government, Justice Minister Osmar Serraglio, belongs to Brasilia’s influentia­l pro-agricultur­e political wing.

 ?? — AFP ?? BRASILIA: Indigenous people march at the Esplanade of the Ministries in Brasilia during a nationwide strike called by unions opposing austerity reforms.
— AFP BRASILIA: Indigenous people march at the Esplanade of the Ministries in Brasilia during a nationwide strike called by unions opposing austerity reforms.

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