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For Brazilian Landless Enemy Is Not Large Landholder Anymore But Agribusiness PDF Print E-mail
2007 - August 2007
Written by Raúl Zibechi   
Friday, 24 August 2007 05:47

MST march in Brazilian capital Brasília in 2005 The largest social movement on the continent, and one of the most important in the world, held its 5th Congress in mid-June 2007 in Brasília. Despite successful mobilization of masses of people and significant media impact, under Brazil's President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva's government the movement faces strong challenges to activate its base against new enemies, such as agribusiness.

Agrarian reform will no longer be the principal demand from the Movimento dos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem Terra (MST), Brazil's Landless Rural Workers Movement . "The agrarian reform proposal that drove MST's struggle for 20 years has run its course. We need a new model of agrarian reform," according to João Pedro Stédile, an MST leader.(1)

He explains: "Classical agrarian reform was developed in European countries, the United States, and Japan after World War II. It involved combining agrarian reform with the development of national industry to create an internal market. Brazil missed four historical opportunities to establish this sort of agrarian reform."

The MST believes that agrarian land redistribution could have occurred: at the end of the 19th century with the abolition of slavery; or during the "Revolution of 1930," which led to industrialization; in 1964, with the rise in social struggles that were interrupted by the military coup; or at the demise of the military regime in the mid-1980s.

The problem, Stédile adds, is that during the 1990s, "Brazilian elites abandoned the national development project" and accepted the neoliberal model that subordinates the country to finance capital."(2)

Economic elites ignored national industrialization and embraced the external market, and agrarian reform is no longer functional in the economic system.

This was the central dilemma for the 5th MST Congress. To make agrarian reform viable, first the neoliberal model that is advancing in Brazil under the administration of Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva must be rejected. The recent agreement between Lula and George W. Bush for the production of biofuels proved to the MST that it can no longer count on Lula to support its goals. Stédile sees Lula's second term, which began in January 2007, as likely to be even more conservative than his first (2003-2006).

Turn Toward the Environment

In contrast to previous congresses, this one had fewer representatives from Lula's Workers Party (PT), and Lula was not invited. Although less than a year before, the MST had called to support Lula in the second round of the presidential election, relations have never been worse. The first leftist government in Brazil's history not only failed to accomplish the agrarian reform expected by the landless, it also supported agribusiness by approving transgenetically modified crops and promoting biofuels .

"Agrarian Reform for Social Justice and Popular Sovereignty" was the theme of the 5th Congress. MST believes its main enemy now is agribusiness linked to multinationals, which wrests land and resources from the type of family agriculture that assures sufficient food for the national population.

The organization proposes five steps: democratize ownership of the land; reorient agricultural production by turning toward the internal market and away from the external market preferred by multinationals; develop new agricultural techniques that do not harm the environment; spread education among farm workers; and develop small agroindustries to create employment.

The resolution approved by the 5th Congress synthesizes the old and new objectives defined by the movement. Among the new directions is the struggle against agribusiness and the multinational corporations that control "the seeds, production, and agricultural commerce," such as Monsanto, Syngenta, Cargill, Bunge, Nestlé, BASF, Bayer, Aracruz, and Stora Enso.

This list reveals the names of the new enemies of rural farmers: enterprises that force farmers off their land by planting large tracts of transgenic soy beans or trees. The document reflects a shift in the movement this year, which began to strongly criticize " agrofuels" after Bush's visit with Lula. The MST Congress demands that this production "come under the control of farmers and rural workers," in order to preserve the environment and establish "the energy sovereignty of each region."(3)

Criticism of agribusiness multinationals implies a shift toward environmental defense that places the MST in a different position than before. Its decision in favor of ecology represents a deepening of its criticism of the agrarian model and the type of society prevailing in Brazil and throughout the world - so-called neoliberalism.

It also allows the MST to strengthen ties with urban movements. Without a new agro-ecology model, Stédile points out, the only future options for farmers are "favela slums, Family Welfare Social Support, or working for foreign companies in agribusiness."

Ethanol in Brazil

Over the past years landless farm workers have observed, and suffered, important changes in agriculture and in rural areas. There was the extensive expansion of monoculture, first with transgenic soy beans and then with sugarcane. The best lands are dedicated to these crops, which prevents the development of family agriculture. But these same crops are destroying entire areas of the country.

It is estimated that in a few years "Os Cerrados," a high plain ecosystem between Brazil's Atlantic coast and the Amazon jungle, will be completely overtaken by monoculture, and its biodiversity destroyed. The next step is the conquest of the Amazon, the planet's lungs, which is being devoured by forestry businesses.

In tandem, experts predict the rapid transference of land to foreign hands. The financial magnate George Soros will invest US$ 800 million in ethanol distilleries through its local subsidiary, Adecoagro. The Cargill Group bought 63% of Cevasa, the largest ethanol plant in Brazil. Global Foods in the United States will invest a billion dollars to construct ethanol plants.

These are just the basic data. Of the largest 500 companies involved in agribusiness in Brazil, six are state-owned, 388 are Brazilian, and 106 foreign-owned. But of the largest 50, 28 are foreign and only 22 Brazilian, according to the June 2007 issue of Exame magazine.

This is the fundamental problem faced by farmers and the poor in Brazil. Large multinationals are investing in one of the richest agricultural areas in the world in order to increase their profits. Even worse is that the State, through its National Bank for Economic and Social Development (BNDES), finances these large companies and facilitates the construction of the infrastructure they need.

The Lula administration's Program to Accelerate Growth foresees the investment of US$ 9 billion over the next four years to build 46 biodiesel plants, 77 ethanol distilleries, and 1,150 kilometers (690 miles) of fuel pipelines with BNDES financing.(4)

As a result of all this, Stédile says in an article in Folha de S. Paulo that the movement focus is on "a democratic agricultural model that guarantees access to work, land, water, and seeds for all."(5) As an example of an undemocratic model he points to Lula's first four years in power, during which the State transferred US$ 300 billion to the financial sector, because Brazil's interest rate is the highest in the world.

An Alliance of Underdogs

"We are not positioned to win this battle for the preservation of the environment if we cannot involve Brazilian society as a whole," says Gilmar Mauro, an MST leader.(6) The South, for example, is facing the serious problem of forest monoculture for the manufacture of cellulose paste, which is advancing upon agricultural lands.

"People must understand that each eucalyptus tree consumes 30 liters of water per day during its first seven years, when it is harvested. The consequences will be devastating to the environment. Humanity is in danger, and that is what we want to discuss with people. While we are concerned about our land, the establishment of a new settlement, natural resources in the whole world are being destroyed," says Mauro.

The MST is clear that the enemy it faces today is much stronger than the traditional individual large landholder, with more resources and better relations with states and politicians. The MST is up against the alliance of three types of transnational capital: oil companies, automotive corporations, and agribusinesses.

But one of the problems is that many people truly believe that biofuels are positive and that the monoculture of sugarcane, eucalyptus, and soy is necessary. That's why now is the time to launch a great debate to start creating a proposal for a different type of society.

Landless farm workers are fiercely fighting for the democratization of communications media, and the Congress Resolution proposes that "each community in the interior have its own popular communications media, such as free community radio stations."

The emphasis on communication is part of their plan to strengthen their linkage with other social movements and build "a Popular Assembly in the municipalities, regions, and states." The MST envisions alliances with urban movements, aware that it must have a strong presence in cities to succeed.

The Congress began to elaborate a new agrarian reform proposal. It maintained that successes over the next years will be measured not by the amount of land occupied or the number of families settled, but by the ability to build a broad rural and urban social movement, in which young people play a major role.

Marina dos Santos, a movement coordinator, clearly defined this stage: "We face the challenge of finding new forms of struggle other than land occupation. A new type of action is required that responds to this new wave of capitalism in rural areas. We must protest the fact that this model does not respond to the needs of the majority of people. We need other methods to promote a dialogue with society."(7)

As an example, on March 8, 2006 and 2007, thousands of women carried out symbolic actions against multinational agribusinesses in order to show society at large what is readily apparent only to specialists: that a small group of companies rules over their lives by controlling geographical space, biodiversity, and technology.

The underlying theme is no longer land, in the sense of gaining a few acres for poor farmers, but a model of development different from the current one. To discuss and design that model it will be necessary to "build unity among social movements."(8)

Another important new aspect of the Congress was the support received from Mexico's Zapatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN). Over the past two years both movements endeavored to reduce the distance between them. A message of support signed by Subcomandante Marcos states that the landless workers "have our hand in friendship, our affection and respect, but also our admiration," and he highlights the "decision and firmness" shown in their struggle for land.

The Congress closed with a festive air, but everyone was aware that the movement faces great difficulties and uncertainties about its own future during the last years of Lula's administration.

For that reason, the opening speech read by Marina dos Santos reminded participants that the future of the MST depends on the education received by children in the settlements. "If our plan is for one year, we'll plant grain; if we have a two-year plan, let's plant trees. But if our plan is for a lifetime, we must educate and train people."(9)

The World's Largest Movement

The "tent city" built in Brasília housed 17,500 men and women rural workers over four days, June 11-15, as well as delegates from 21 farmers organizations and 31 countries throughout the world. The logistical effort to receive them, house them, and secure food and transportation was gigantic. For those days, living "landless style" brought the miracle that many things were accomplished with very few resources. Forty percent of the participants were women.

The organization that today is the MST took its first steps in 1979, under the military dictatorship, with the first occupation of lands in Rio Grande do Sul. The first Congress was celebrated in 1985 during the transition to democracy with the theme, "Without Agrarian Reform, There is No Democracy," with slightly over a thousand delegates.

The second, in 1990, raised the message, "Occupy, Resist, Produce," and the third, in 1995, "Agrarian Reform, Everyone's Battle." In 2000, just before the elections that gave Lula his first victory, the MST held its fourth Congress, emphasizing "Agrarian Reform: For a Brazil Without Large Estates."

The movement has 5,000 settlements that occupy slightly more than 22 million hectares (55 million acres), on which two million people live. Also, there are more than 150,000 landless workers camped in plastic huts along highways, struggling to obtain land.

At the 1,500 settlement schools the men and women teachers came mostly out of the movement and teach based on a "pedagogy of the land" which, in broad terms, could be defined as Paul Freire's popular education adapted to settlement reality.

Besides a school, each settlement has community spaces for adult education, healthcare, and religious services for diverse beliefs, although the immense majority professes Catholicism in a rural version linked to liberation theology.

Production is quite varied and is adapted to the possibilities of each settlement. The best organized try to combine family-based production, to assure a certain food sovereignty, with cooperative agroindustries involving swine, poultry, and cattle, as well as dairies, mills, and the processing of fruit, coffee, sugarcane, vegetables, and flour.

End Notes

(1) Evelyn Guilherme interview with João Pedro Stédile.

(2) Idem.

(3) See the 5th Congress Resolution at the MST website: www.mst.org.br.

(4) Oficial report, "Biocombustibles en Brasil. Desarrollo y financiación del BNDES" (Biofuels in Brazil. BNDES Development and Financing).

(5) João Pedro Stédile, "Reforma agrária por justiça e soberania popular" (Agrarian Reform for Justice and Popular Sovereignty).

(6) Verena Glass, "MST prioriza alianças políticas, diálogo com a sociedade e sustentabilidade" (MST Prioritizes Political Alliances, Diálogo with Society, and Sustainability).

(7) Marina dos Santos interview.

(8) Osvaldo León citing a MST national coordinator, Neuri Rosseto, "MST presenta nueva propuesta de reforma agraria" (MST Presents A New Agrarian Reform Proposal).

(9) Marina dos Santos, opening speech at the 5th Congress.

For More Information

Works Cited:

"Biocombustibles en Brasil. Desarrollo y financiación del BNDES," July 12, 2007, www.mercosurabc.com.ar.

Glass, Verena, "MST prioriza alianças políticas, diálogo com a sociedade e sustentabilidade," June 18, 2007, www.agenciacartamaior.com.br.

Guilherme, Evelyn, Interview with João Pedro Stédile, Época, July 2, 2007.

León, Osvaldo, "MST presenta nueva propuesta de reforma agrarian," June 11, 2007, www.alainet.org. In English: www.latinlasnet.org/node/63.

Movimento dos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem Terra: www.mst.org.br.

Santos, Marina dos, Interview, June 2007, www.brasildefato.com.br.

Santos, Marina dos, Opening speech, 5th Congress, www.mst.org.br.

Stédile, João Pedro, "Reforma agraria por justiça e soberania popular," June 11, 2007, www.folha.com.br.

Raúl Zibechi is an international analyst at Brecha, a weekly journal in Montevideo, Uruguay, professor and researcher on social movements at the Multiversidad Franciscana de América Latina, and adviser to grassroots organizations. He writes the monthly "Zibechi Report" for the CIP Americas Policy Program (www.americaspolicy.org).

Translated from "MST: Crear las bases del mundo nuevo" by Maria Roof.



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Comments (16)Add Comment
SOMEBODY....
written by brazilian dude, August 25, 2007
give these guys a time machine!!! They actually believe in turning back the clock!!!
Somebody also give them a biology textbook!!! "the Amazon, the planet's lungs" is something I hadn't seen in some time! Shelly, if you are out there, please enlighten this gentleman!!!
...
written by Marc, August 25, 2007
The greatest deforestation ever identified by the NGO "SOS Mata Atlântica" trougout its 20 years of existence, is located in the Brazilian southern state of Paraná, around the city of Rio Bonito do Iguaçú. The devastation's core is at "Fazenda Araupel", a huge farm bought by the Federal Government in 2004, as part of the Agrarian Reform plan. According to the Agriculture Federation of Paraná (FAEP), inside two local MST (the landless movement) settlements "Ireno Alves" and "Magno Freire", more than 10 thousand hectares of native bush were completely destroyed between 1996 and 2002.
I used to feel...
written by bo, August 25, 2007
sorry for these MST idiots, but not anymore. Not after what I've seen over the last month. Not far from where I currently live on the beach is a beachfront piece of land, around 100,000 sq meters, used to be a park, the property is owned by Telemar. The MST idiots have now gone there!! Living beachfront!! They had an article on the front page of the paper a couple weeks ago where their leader said, "just because we're poor doesn't mean we can't live in front of the beach".

The police need to go in there and clean that s**t up ASAP.
bo...
written by brazilian dude, August 25, 2007
welcome to real life...good thing you woke up.I could go on for hour about MST, but it's just a waste of time.Believe me when I say THEY ARE DANGEROUS CRIMINALS.
I say that based on: a)the enourmous amount of intel already amassed on them.If they had their way, they'd be in command of the country and all oppisition would be shot.Literally.
b)the firsthand experience I've had with them.The only reason I'm still alive to tell you about it is that despite their viciousness and will to kill, they are technically inept.And cowardly.After their fist couple of casualties, it became a rout.
Cowardly criminals are always the most dangerous ones.
If you live close to where they are, take precautions.
MST, PT, the state of RGS, they are all the same.
written by João Pinga, August 26, 2007
welcome to real life...good thing you woke up.I could go on for hour about MST, but it's just a waste of time.Believe me when I say THEY ARE DANGEROUS CRIMINALS.


Brazilan Dude and Bo, yes we can be harsh with the good ole folks at MST, however scratch ANY large group (farmers, politicians, police, political NGOs, businessmen) and you´ll find corruption, deciet and greed just a hair from the surface. Remember, this is Brazil. If you THINK you can get away with something, then go right ahead. Deal with the consequences later, if any, and always plead "Não fui eu" if caught or questioned. We can lament the corruption of what at one point was a fairly valiant group with noble aims, but we may as well lament the society that allowed/s such tomfoolery to exist. In terms of being dangerous, well, I don´t know of any environments or any groups in this nation that are "safe". MST may be more openly millitant, however push anyone (even the most peaceful of souls) just a little and the reaction will be over-the-top aggression. THis is the way it always has been, and will continue so for some time. You steal what you can when you can, and you resolve issues by hiring gunmen (in the north) or using physical threats (anywhere) because using the justice system doesn´t accomplish anything really (as we witness nightly). Disputes between neighbours rarely involve nor are resolved by the police, but always with "people you know". Simply barbaric. The truly sad part of this is that there ARE stellar individuals in this nation, that do outstanding work to aid the disenfranchised, or run for polticis, however they are in the minority. If we could tip the scales, Brazil would be a brilliant nation, however with 179,000,000 corrupt violent thugs and their supporters compared with 1,000,000 truly altruistic, intelligent and civil brazilians - the odds are against us.

FUI!
Here we go, part 1
written by Shelly, August 26, 2007
MST is trying to achieve what??? Educate who??? Please, read this article from The Independent and see what this people are doing to the timber in Brazil, along with Bin Lula's land reform. He is manipulating again the numbers to in order to keep PT in power.
"Amazon forest sold off in housing scam, claims Greenpeace
By Sophie Morris
Published: 21 August 2007

The Brazilian government stands accused of selling off huge swaths of the Amazon rainforest - including its oldest protected national park - to unscrupulous logging companies, under the cover of a flawed sustainable development project.

The Brazilian President, Luiz Ignácio Lula da Silva, won power in 2003 with a promise to settle 400,000 homeless families during his four-year term, an unrealistic target he is accused of reaching in last-minute deals prior to last year's election.

An eight-month investigation by Greenpeace into the land scam, revealed that the Brazilian land reform agency, INCRA, had set up large settlements in rainforest areas instead of placing them in already deforested areas, and settling urban families who promptly sold logging rights to major timber conpanies.

"Instead of helping, the official efforts are putting in place mechanisms to ensure the supply of timber to loggers. This opens the door to further forest destruction and climate change," says Greenpeace's André Muggiati.

In 2006, INCRA created 97 "sustainable development settlements" (PDS) in Santarém in the west of the Amazonian state of Pará, in areas of primary forest of huge value to loggers. These settlements cover 2.2 million hectares and have been assigned to 33,700 families.

"All these settlements were created in the last three months of last year," says an INCRA employee. "It was the end of Lula's first term so he had to accomplish the targets. It is politicians who will benefit from the PDS system." In October Mr Da Silva won a second term in office.

As well as politicians, the scheme benefits the settlers, who receive land and sell their logging rights to large timber firms; the loggers, who gain access to valuable timber; and INCRA, which is close to reaching the government targets.

Only last week the Brazilian government boasted a drop in deforestation levels for the third year running; it has now opened the floodgates to increased deforestation and its knock-on effect on global climate change.

Brazil is the world's fourth largest emitter of greenhouse gases. A large proportion of emissions come from deforestation in the Amazon and 15 per cent of all deforestation is caused by the creation of land settlements.
Part 2
written by Shelly, August 26, 2007

INCRA is creating settlements so quickly it cannot afford to provide the necessary infrastructure for residents. It is cutting corners by encouraging residents' associations to make deals with logging companies, who provide roads and sanitation.

The PDS concept was conceived in 1999 by Raimundo Lima, a director of INCRA, as a way of sustaining traditional families and enabling them to live off the land. Each family was to receive housing and a number of financial credits to get them started along with the permission to farm 20 per cent of their land and log the remaining 80 per cent in accordance with a strict forest management plan. These plans are now dictated by the loggers, which means they can flaunt sustainable logging guidelines and pay way under market value for the timber.

Felipe Fritz Braga, Santarém's federal prosecutor, says the original outline of the PDS as a settlement for traditional families has fallen way off track and that loggers funded last year's governmental elections to safeguard the programme. "Ten years ago, a series of PDSs were created that were thought to be for traditional communities. Over the years they have undergone a legal metamorphosis and they are now being used in the Amazon to settle people who are not traditional communities," he explains. "The government's source of money for the elections came from the loggers."

At INCRA's Santarém office, which quadrupled in size in 2005 ahead of the current settlement drive, staff are unhappy about the underhand methods they have been encouraged to follow to get the green light for so many settlements in such a short space of time. Two informants say they have been forced to falsify the dates on important documents, that they have seen maps on internal computers created by an INCRA official for a landgrabber and that the research behind the creation of one PDS was done in the aircraft of a wealthy logger.

They also claim 11 settlements have been created in the national park of Amazonia where not a single family is living, at the behest of a powerful farmer, and are worried the situation around Santarém is an indication of further devastation across the Amazon: "We believe that what is going on here is a lab test, and the model will be replicated all over the Amazon later on."

The outspoken environmental campaigner Sister Dorothy Stang was murdered defending two such settlements in 2005. Because of Sister Dorothy's support, the PDS scheme has wrongly become synonymous with good environmental practice.

The Amazon has long been under threat from large industry: logging companies clear-cut the dense jungle before farmers move on to the land to raise cattle; huge soy plantations then exhaust the soil."


Brazilian Dude, they know exactly what they are doing, the Amazon will never be able to recover to its original glory. The Amazon is the world's oldest ecosystem, it took millions of years to become what it is today. And Bin Lula is destroying at this very moment. The university of Sao Paulo has a spectrometer, actually it is the world's biggest machine and they are in the process of coming up with the life cycle of the CO2 in the forest. Apparently, the Amazon stores CO2 for about 5 years before it releases again into the atmosphere. If deforestation keeps going on at the present rate, C02 will be available in the Troposphere more rapidly and in less time...do I need to say more? The future of mankind is bleak in my opnion.

Here is the article.

http://www.llnl.gov/str/March06/pdfs/03_06.4.pdf
Correction/spectrometer
written by Shelly, August 26, 2007
It is the world's biggest one, but not the biggest machine, if you know what I mean. I don't want to get slammed for vocabulary usage here. And Bin Lula is destroying IT at this very moment.
Brazilian Dude
written by João da Silva, August 26, 2007
After their fist couple of casualties, it became a rout.


a)After their first couple of Dozens or Hundreds of casualities? b) Any POWs?
J.Pinga
written by João da Silva, August 26, 2007
Brazilan Dude and Bo, yes we can be harsh with the good ole folks at MST, however scratch ANY large group (farmers, politicians, police, political NGOs, businessmen) and you´ll find corruption, deciet and greed just a hair from the surface.


You pretty well summed up the reasons for the state of anarchy we are living under.I just wanted to say that it is not resticted only to the state of RGS,but to Brasil,in general.However, in our state, still the PM can be trusted,though I dont know for how long.
João,
written by brazilian dude, August 27, 2007
in the specific incident I allude to,the first couple.The fact that they went down screaming like a coupl'a frantic banshees (they were only wounded) was probably not good for the morale of the others...nobody wants to be next.
No, no POW's. It wasn't that kind of incident.
MST
written by Ric, August 27, 2007
I got the MST riled up about 5 years ago and they put dents all over my near-new F-4000, which is a personal vehicle.

That´s why I don´t want to paint it, I like it that way.

They play rough but are smart enough to turn tail and run when the odds are against them.
Ric
written by João da Silva, August 27, 2007
They play rough but are smart enough to turn tail and run when the odds are against them.


Dude is irritatingly right most of the time smilies/cheesy.gif
Typical MST BS
written by Roy Rodgers, August 27, 2007
The problem with MST propaganda is this;

Land is capital, not income.

Check out this quote

As a result of all this, Stédile says in an article in Folha de S. Paulo that the movement focus is on "a democratic agricultural model that guarantees access to work, land, water, and seeds for all."

Who is going to provide the tractors? harvesters? fertilizer? Electric generators? farm animals? and technical education for the MST families? unless, of course they are talking about substance farming with animal traction.

The reality is that farming is a risky, capital intensive business - all the ideology in the world can't change that


And here it is...
written by bo, August 30, 2007
was wondering why in my trip to the city yesterday there were police cruisers stationed in two different areas along the beach...

I used to feel...
written by bo, 2007-08-25 07:29:51
sorry for these MST idiots, but not anymore. Not after what I've seen over the last month. Not far from where I currently live on the beach is a beachfront piece of land, around 100,000 sq meters, used to be a park, the property is owned by Telemar. The MST idiots have now gone there!! Living beachfront!! They had an article on the front page of the paper a couple weeks ago where their leader said, "just because we're poor doesn't mean we can't live in front of the beach".

The police need to go in there and clean that s**t up ASAP.


Clube da ex-Telergipe é desocupado pacificamente

29/08/2007, 15:36

Desocupação ocorreu sem violência
As famílias que estavam ocupando o antigo clube da Telergipe deixaram o local na manhã desta quarta-feira, 29. O negociador, coronel Luis Fernando, classificou a ação da Polícia Militar como uma ‘desocupação cidadã’. Eles passam agora a ocupar uma área pertencente à Marinha, em frente ao clube.

O coronel esteve no local com outros policiais, o capelão Capitão Juarez, e o pastor Capitão Amim. O objetivo era cumprir a liminar de reintegração de posse, respeitando a integridade física das pessoas que estavam no local. Antes mesmo de a PM chegar, os barracos de madeira e lona já tinham sido desarmados.

Cel. Luis Fernando
Pastor e padre falaram às famílias reunidas, na tentativa de confortá-los e acalmá-los. “Nós procuramos uma solução pacífica para cumprir a medida judicial. Temos o entendimento de que também nós somos povo, a Polícia Militar é formada por cidadãos”, ressaltou o coronel Luis Fernando. Após as orações, foram distribuídas balas e pipocas para as crianças.

Reintegração

Desde o dia 12, as famílias estão acampadas no antigo clube da Telergipe. A Telemar, atual proprietária do espaço, pediu reintegração de posse, concedida no dia 14, pela juíza substituta da 8ª Vara Cível, Jocelaine Costa Ramirez. O advogado Rodrigo Machado, membro da Comissão de Direitos Humanos da OAB/SE, explica que a liminar foi encaminhada à Secretaria de Segurança Pública (SSP) para que a PM cumprisse a ordem de reintegração.

“O Grupo de Gestão de Crise da SSP negociou com os ocupantes e deu prazo até o dia 27 para a
Cap. Amim, Cel. Luis Fernando, Cap. Juarez e José Marcos (esq. para dir.)
saída voluntária”, esclarece. A juíza oficiou novamente a SSP para que fizesse a desocupação, alertando que poderia incorrer em descumprimento de ordem judicial. Na terça-feira, 28, a PM esteve no local para avisar que voltaria nesta quarta-feira, às 9h.

Os policiais chegaram ao clube por volta das 10h, com a presença da Tropa de Choque, caminhões para ajudar na retirada do material, caso as famílias solicitassem, e ônibus para levá-los a outro lugar.

Rodrigo Machado
Os acampados alegam não ter lugar para onde ir. Segundo José Marcos, um dos coordenadores dos ocupantes, um cadastro interno foi feito com as 438 famílias, e constatou-se que a maioria morava de favor em casa de parentes ou em quartos de vila e barracos alugados. “Essas famílias fazem opção entre morar ou comer”, alega.

“A moradia é essencial, não chega ser nem um direito humano, é um direito animal”, acredita Rodrigo Machado. Ele diz que a OAB entende a reforma urbana como um direito prioritário. Eles pretendem ficar no novo acampamento até que tenham um outro lugar para ir.
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