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Business as Usual PDF Print E-mail
2001 - January 2001
Tuesday, 01 January 2002 08:54

Business as Usual


By Brazzil Magazine

The Global Justice Center (Centro de Justiça Global), the Pastoral Land Commission (Comissão Pastoral da Terra) and the Movement of Landless Rural Laborers (Movimento dos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem Terra, MST) have prepared this report for submission to Her Excellency the High Commissioner for Human Rights, Mrs. Mary Robinson, on the occasion of her landmark visit to Brazil in May 2000. This report seeks to summarize the most recent trends in the struggle to achieve land reform in Brazil. It begins with an overview of the historic inequality of land distribution in Brazil and the current status of increasing concentration of ownership of productive lands.

The report analyzes the failure of the administration of President Fernando Henrique Cardoso to implement meaningful land reform policies and analyzes the measures implemented in recent weeks. Among these measures are ones limiting lands which may be used for land reform and others restricting access to land and credit for those involved in the organized struggle for change. Even more worrisome in the context of civil and political rights are the repressive police measures implemented by the Administration to attack the landless movement, including revival of methods and legislation from the military dictatorship.

The report includes a summary of instances of extreme violence, in many cases orchestrated by the state, against landless rural poor, including torture, death threats, killings, beatings and arrest. It highlights abuses in the state of Paraná in Brazil's more developed south (frequently believed less susceptible to severe rights abuse) where the state government has led a campaign of repression against the landless movement. Finally, the report summarizes the latest developments in the 1996 massacre in which police killed 19 landless workers. The death toll from that incident now stands at 21 (two of those injured have now died); the report analyzes the failure and bias of the state justice system, which has yet to prosecute those responsible.

In sum, the report seeks to set the record straight regarding agrarian reform—or better stated, the lack thereof—and the campaign of violence and repression that the Brazilian government has unleashed on the landless, appealing to both domestic public opinion and the international community.

Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo and Curitiba, Brazil, May 2000

THE CONTEXT: BACKGROUND INFORMATION ON RURAL BRAZIL

The concentration of land tenure in Brazil is among the highest in the world. Fewer than 50,000 rural landowners possess estates greater than one thousand hectares and thus control more than 50 percent of registered land. Close to 1 percent of rural landowners hold roughly 46 percent of all land. Of the 400 million hectares registered as private property, only sixty million hectares are used for planting crops. The remaining 340 million hectares are used for pecuária (cattle raising). According to figures from the Institute for Colonization and Agrarian Reform (Instituto de Colonização e Reforma Agrária, INCRA), there are nearly one hundred million hectares of unused land in Brazil.

According to the 1995 Census, there are nearly 4.8 million rural "landless" families, in other words, persons who live as renters, sharecroppers, or squatters or who hold rural properties smaller than five hectares. The Brazilian Constitution requires that lands that do not fulfill a social function must be expropriated for use in agrarian reform. Social function of land is determined according to the level of productivity, in addition to criteria that include respect for labor rights and the environmental protection.

Brazil produces just seventy-five million tons of grain per year. This number is one fourth the average level of other countries with similar, or inferior, climates and soil quality. According to the Agricultural and Cattle Raising Census, between 1985 and 1996, the number of acres with permanent crop growth fell by two million hectares while the number of acres with temporary crop growth fell by 8.3 million hectares. From 1980 to 1996, the area of lands cultivated fell by 2 percent while the population increased by 34 percent. In the 1980s, the Bank of Brazil (Banco do Brasil) invested roughly 19 billion dollars in agriculture. Between 1994 and 1998, the average income of farmers fell by 49 percent.

The best lands in Brazil are employed in the cultivation of single crops for exportation: sugar cane, coffee, cotton, soy and oranges. At the same time, 32 million people experience hunger regularly in the country and 65 million are malnourished. Of these 32 million, one half live in rural areas. According to official statistics, close to 30 million people migrated from the countryside to urban areas in the period 1970-1990. The overall contingent of rural laborers fell by 23 percent from 1985 to 1996. Today, more than 77 percent of the Brazilian population live in cities.

According to the 1995 Census, there are 23 million workers in rural Brazil, yet only five million are classified as rural salaried workers (either permanent or temporary). Close to 65 percent of salaried rural workers do not have formal labor contracts (carteira assinada in Brazilian terminology) and only 40 percent of these workers have year-round jobs. Many of these laborers toil as much as 14 hours per day. In this context, women and children are the most vulnerable. The greater part of rural women work double shifts, in agricultural and house work. Many women and children that labor in rural areas do not receive any compensation. A study based on a 1995 report demonstrated that nearly four million rural children between the ages of five and fourteen work in the countryside in the southern, southeast and northeastern regions of Brazil, representing some 11 percent of the population group. Only 29 percent of working children receive any monetary compensation. Among children between the ages of five and nine years, only 7 percent receive compensation. A very large number of rural children have no access to school and, among adults, the level of illiteracy in some regions reaches 70 percent.

According to the 1996 Agricultural and Cattle Raising Census performed by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística, IBGE), there has been an increase in the concentration of land tenure in the past two decades. In 1970, estates of less than one hundred hectares represented 90.8 percent of rural properties and constituted 23 percent of the total area. In 1996, this figure fell to 89.3 percent of estates and 20 percent of total area. In contrast, in 1970, estates with areas greater than 1,000 hectares represented 0.7 percent of the total number of properties and accounted for 39.5 percent of the total area. In 1996, these estates accounted for 1 percent of the number of properties and 45 percent of the total area. Between 1985 and 1996, the number of rural properties fell from 5,801,809 to 4,859,865, a reduction of 941,944. This decrease is equal to 61 percent of the total area of lands producing grain in the 1997-1998 harvest. Between 1994 and 1998, 400,000 small farmers lost their lands and 800,000 rural laborers lost their jobs.

At present, agricultural properties with declarations as to their extent may be divided in the following manner:

4.3 million with areas less than 100 hectares
470,000 with areas from 100 to 1,000 hectares
47,000 with areas from 1,000 to 10,000 hectares
2,200 with areas greater than 10,000 hectares

According to the 1996 Census, production level may be divided in the following manner:

properties with areas smaller than 100 hectares account for 47 percent of the total value of agricultural and cattle raising production;

properties with areas between 100 and 1,000 hectares account for 32 percent of agricultural and cattle raising production

properties with areas between 1,000 and 10,000 hectares account for 17 percent of this production

estates with areas greater than 10,000 hectares account for 4 percent of this total production

With regard to the distribution of laborers, one finds:

properties with areas smaller than 100 hectares account for 40.7 percent of laborers

properties with areas between 100 and 1,000 hectares account for 39.9 percent of laborers

properties with areas greater than 1,000 hectares account for 4.2 percent of laborers

The figures above demonstrate that a process of agrarian reform is of fundamental importance to address serious economic and social problems facing Brazil.

THE CURRENT AGRARIAN REFORM POLICIES OF THE BRAZILIAN GOVERNMENT

The Brazilian Government has failed to implement Article 11 (2) (a) of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, which requires states-parties:

To improve methods of production, conservation and distribution of food by making full use of technical and scientific knowledge, by disseminating knowledge of the principles of nutrition and by developing or reforming agrarian systems in such a way to achieve the most efficient development and utilization of natural resources.

In response to recent political pressure created by rural laborers and subsistence farmers throughout the country, the federal government announced, on May 4, 2000, a package of measures related to agrarian reform. To demonstrate the importance attached to these measures, the presidential palace itself (Palácio do Planalto) released the package in a press conference attended by the Secretary General of the Presidency and the Ministers of Justice and Agrarian Development.

On May 5, 2000, organizations of rural laborers, gathered principally by the Landless Workers Movement (Movimento dos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem Terra, MST), the Unitary Workers' Central (Central Única dos Trabalhadores), Contag (the Movement of Small Farmers, MPA), the Pastoral Land Commission (Comissão Pastoral da Terra, CPT), the Movement of Persons Affected by Dams (Movimento dos Atingidos pelas Barragens, MAB), the Southern Front for Family Agriculture (Frente Sul da Agricultura Familiar) and the Movement for the Liberation of the Landless (Movimento de Libertação dos Sem Terra) released a note regarding the governmental measures.

That note criticized the manipulative nature of the Government's agrarian reform. These groups demanded an effective policy of agrarian reform in Brazil, in combination with a new agricultural policy directed towards the nation's interests and the democratization of such policies. Missing among these measures was any increase in funding for agrarian reform. Below, we report the annual budgetary allocations for the National Institute for Colonization and Agrarian Reform (Instituto Nacional de Colonização e Reforma Agrária, INCRA) during the government of President Fernando Henrique Cardoso:

1995: 1.3 billion Brazilian reais
1996: 1.4 billion Brazilian reais
1997: 2.0 billion Brazilian reais
1998: 2.2 billion Brazilian reais
1999: 1.3 billion Brazilian reais
2000: 1.3 billion Brazilian reais

The announced measures include the criminalization of laborers who engage in occupations of rural properties and public buildings with threats to their possible receipt of land title, as well as the criminalization of the leaders of the landless movement by the use of the National Security Law (Lei de Segurança Nacional), a remnant from the military dictatorship.

The leadership of the Workers' Party (Partido dos Trabalhadores) in the Chamber of Deputies (the federal lower house) released its analysis of these measures:

I . Through the 38th edition of the Provisional Measure No. 2.027 of May 4, the Administration has added to existing agrarian legislation the following measures:

By means of the first article of the Provisional Measure which alters Decree-Law No. 3.365/41, the Administration decided that there will be no compensatory interest when a property subject to expropriation possess a measure of land use and efficiency of use equal to zero.

The incidence of compensatory interest on expropriated properties for agrarian reform constitutes an extreme immorality. To eliminate this possibility only in the case of properties deemed totally unproductive represents an artifice designed to support the Administration's deceptive public opinion campaign. Paragraph (1) of Article (1) of the previous versions of the Provisional Measure, even when they manipulated the basis of compensatory interest, associated with the counterpart ceasing profit, required that these monies be designed to compensate the loss of income produced by the property. Thus, the novelty of the announcement was already contemplated in the prior versions of the Provisional Measures due to the fact that when there would be no income from properties with no production.

In practice, the Provisional Measure will have no effect since a given landowner will need only cultivate a handful of lettuce plants to justify compensatory interest payments. The uselessness of this measure is explained by the ongoing process of substitution of expropriation with land purchase and sale mechanisms in the context of so-called market agrarian reform undertaken by the Administration. In its second article, the Provisional Measure adds article 95-A to the Land Statute (Estatuto da Terra), instituting the rural leasing program, in the context of agrarian reform.

In fact, this article institutes yet another instrument of the "new agrarian reform" under the control of large landowners. Leasing is not a novelty. Since the Land Statute, leasing has been practiced in such a fashion have led to the exploitation and misery of rural workers.

The novelty introduced by the Administration comes in a paragraph included in the article that prohibits expropriation of properties involved in the leasing program as long as the properties are leased. Until this change, article 30 of Decree Law 59.566 of November 14, 1966 provided only that in the case of partial expropriation of a leased property, the lessee would be guaranteed the right to a proportional reduction in rent or to rescind the lease. Thus, the generals of the military dictatorship were not as daring as our current civilian President.

The Provisional Measure, in addition to clearly violating the Constitution, by increasing by means of a provisional measure cases of "insusceptibility" to expropriation established by Article 185 of the Constitution (small, medium and unproductive properties), expresses the anti-agrarian reform nature of the package of measures and reinforces the pro-landowner bias of agrarian legislation. Now, a landowner needs only register his property with the rural leasing program to guarantee that his lands will never be expropriated.

Article 4 of the Provisional Measure inserted text (paragraphs 6, 7, 8 and 9) to the Agrarian Law (Law No. 8.629/93). Through the first two paragraphs the Administration determined that "the rural property subject to occupation or unmotivated invasion due to agrarian or land conflict will not be inspected [for agrarian reform purposes] for two years following the termination of the invasion." In the case of reoccupation of such a property, this period is doubled.

This is a recycled measure in that Article 4 of Decree No. 2.250/97 establishes that a "property that is the subject of occupation will not be inspected [for agrarian reform purposes] until the occupation has terminated." As in the previous example, in addition to an attempt to intimidate the struggle for agrarian reform, this article clearly violates the Constitution, given that without inspection, there may be no expropriation. As we saw above, the Constitution does not permit this possibility of immunity to expropriation of rural properties.

Paragraphs 8 and 9 establish that the entity, organization, corporate body, social movement or society (a significant juridical effort to include the MST) that directly or indirectly assists, collaborates, creates incentives for, incites, induces or participates in invasions of rural properties or public properties either in rural or land conflicts, in a collective nature, shall not receive, by any means, public funds. Should such funds already have been disbursed, authorities shall have the prerogative of retaining such moneys or rescinding the relevant contract, agreement or similar instrument.

One sees an effort to include in these repressive measures the struggles of rural laborers, whose means of pressure, such as the occupations of unproductive properties, have been recognized to be legitimate by the federal Superior Court of Justice (Superior Tribunal de Justiça, STJ). One sees as well that the Administration has extended a measure of exception (the Provisional Measure) to the entire public sector, in other words, including public, state and municipal powers.

The restrictions on access to public funding for workers' organizations have the clear and "heinous" goal of suffocating economically these groups as a strategy to impose on them control by the government. Indeed, more than these organizations, the victims of these policies are the families of rural laborers settled in agrarian reform projects.

Included in Article 2-A in the Agrarian Law, disposition that, in the case of fraud or simulation of occupation or invasion by the landowner or legitimate occupant of a property, an administrative sanction of 50,000 UFIRs (approximately US$ 30,000) and the cancellation of the rural property in the National System de Rural Registry.

The fact of this addition is that it is just now that the Administration has decided to take steps to create disincentives to the widespread and notorious fraudulent practices by large landowners.

As part of the process of "decentralization" (euphemism for the effort to de-federalize agrarian reform) the Administration has promised to send to Congress a bill to provide states with authority to execute agrarian reform, parallel to federal measures in this regard. The text of the bill has not been made available to us. Among the promised measures is redistribution of Agrarian Reform Titles (Títulos da Dívida Agrária, TDA) to the states. The LandsStatute (1964) provided legal instruments for states and municipalities to complement federal efforts through agreements to implement agrarian reform.

In fact, the Administration seeks to implement its strategy of rendering agrarian reform non-obligatory, transferring financial and political costs to states and municipalities. The Administration announced that, through a Provisional Measure, it will extend the period of receipt of TDAs for up to 50 years. Mere window dressing. Only by means of constitutional amendment may the actual limit of up to 20 years be modified in compliance with Article 184 of the Constitution.

The Administration will send to Congress a bill transferring services (read administrative costs) and the collection of the Rural Territorial Tax (Imposto Territorial Rural, ITR) to the states that must create funds to finance agrarian reform.

With this measure, the Administration tends toward the creation of rural anarchy in the country. Symptomatically, the Administration disregards the environmental and land-related dimensions of the ITR and seeks to value the financial dimension of the tax. This financial element, however, is unlikely to have even a remote effect in practice given the greater power exercised by the large land estates and their owners in the power structure of the states.

II. Measures in "Defense of Public Order"

The Ministry of Justice will take strong measures to prevent, through the deployment of the Federal Police, disorder and eviction actions in all properties of the federal government, without prejudice to actions that may be taken by the States.

The Administration announced the creation of the Division of Agrarian and Land Conflicts within the Federal Police in Brasília and within the states; police inquiries already in course and new inquiries will be thoroughly investigated.

The police have reinstituted the use of the Law of National Security (Lei de Segurança Nacional, LSN), a remnant from the military dictatorship. On May 16, 2000, for example, police authorities in Paraná state charged nine landless laborers under the LSN, whose provisions include a sentence of up to three years for the vague offense of "threatening the established order" These measures constitute, in our opinion, the thrust of the treatment dispensed by the Administration to grass-roots movements, based on intimidation.

These steps modify the Administration's intervention in the agrarian context. The Cardoso Administration seeks to free itself by transferring responsibilities to states and municipalities as the measures commented above demonstrate. However, the Administration decided to maintain within the federal sphere, repression of those who fight for agrarian reform. In this regard, the Administration is motivated as much by its need to demonstrate to conservative sectors its continued authority as by its failure to obtain the uniform support of the state governments for its repressive and authoritarian convictions.

Strictly speaking, when the government authorizes anticipatory action of the Federal Police to prevent threatened and actual occupations of public buildings, it announces the intervention of the federal government in the public security systems of the states. Specifically, with the creation of the Division of Agrarian Conflicts within the Federal Police, the Administration appears to be signaling the creation of a new Department of Social and Political Order (Departamento de Ordem Política e Social, DOPS,) a political police division created during the dictatorship (1964- 1985). In addition, the resumption and intensification of police inquiries of actions by rural laborers seek to intimidate by criminalizing the leaders of social movements in the country.

HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS IN RURAL BRAZIL

In Brazil, social inequality may be traced back to the development and maintenance of semi-feudal agrarian structures created in the period of colonization. The contemporary consequences of this legacy are serious social conflicts and violations of human rights. In the past 12 years, 1,167 rural laborers have been killed. Of these homicides, only 86 have resulted in trials and in only seven were those who ordered the crimes convicted.

In its 1998 annual report, the Pastoral Land Commission registered an increase in the number of conflicts in rural areas and of the use of violence against rural laborers. The number of conflicts rose to 1,100 from 736 in 1997. These conflicts involved some 1,125,116 people throughout the country as opposed to 506,053 in 1997. The northeast region presented the greatest number of conflicts (542) and persons involved in conflicts (678,593). Next comes the southeast region with 195 conflicts, followed by the center-west region, with 133 conflicts, the southern region with 130 and the north region with 100. The north region ranks second in the number of persons involved with 146,953 followed by the center-west with 122,297, the southern region 109,048 and the southeast region with 68,225.

In 1998, 47 rural laborers were killed during rural land conflicts. The north region presents the greatest number of such cases, 17 (11 of these in the state of Pará alone). Next, one finds the northeast region with 11 cases, the south region with nine and the southeast region with six and the center-west region with four. The number of laborers killed increased by 56.67 percent—in 1997, 30 laborers were killed. In this same year, 46 rural laborers survived homicide attempts. Eighty-eight received death threats, 35 were tortured, 164 were physically assaulted and battered, 466 were arrested and 207 suffered injuries.

Agrarian reform continues to be an important subject for millions of Brazilians. In 1998 alone, there were 125 demonstrations on land issues, agricultural and drought policy, involving 90,580 people in 23 states. The table below demonstrates the number of rural workers killed in recent years.

Year Number of killings
1995 41
1996 54
1997 30
1998 47
1999 42

In 1998, 252 rural laborers were subjected to arbitrary detentions. In 1999, this number rose to 450.

VIOLENCE IN PARANÁ STATE

Paraná has been one of the Brazilian states with the greatest incidence of violations committed against rural laborers. On May 2, 2000, close to 1,500 rural landless laborers on their way to the state capital, Curitiba, suffered violent repression at the hands of the police. The landless were on 50 buses at a distance of five kilometers (three miles) from the city when military police prevented their passage on highway BR-277. The police forced the landless to leave the buses and lie on the side of road, aiming their weapons at them. At this point, many of the landless were beaten by police officers. Those that tried to flee or to defend themselves were hit by tear gas from canisters thrown by police and by rubber and lead bullets. Police fired tear gas canisters into buses, targeting the women and children that remained inside. Police chased after one group of thirty landless for two kilometers (more than one mile). The landless believed that the police used lead bullets during the chase at the same time that they fired gas canisters and followed the fleeing men with helicopters.

During the incident, one young man was shot in the head and another in the abdomen. Both these men are still disappeared. Close to 180 landless were injured during the police operation. Some of those injured received death threats from the military police while at the hospital.

During the operation, rural laborer Antônio Tavares Pereira was shot in the abdomen and killed. The government of Paraná state responded immediately to the death of Tavares Pereira, concentrating its efforts to convince public opinion that, first, Tavares Pereira was not a member of the MST.

The official version, defended by the Secretary of Public Security of Paraná, asserted that Tavares Pereira had been found on highway BR-116 and not BR-277 where the conflict had occurred. The Secretary assured the media that conflict began at 10:40 a.m. and that Tavares Pereira had arrived at the hospital at 9:09 a.m. This version was contested by the police district chief (delegado) Fauze Hussain of the Homicides Division in Curitiba who confirmed the MST version that the conflict had begun at 8:15 a.m.. Even after it became clear that he had been wrong about the time of the incident, the Secretary insisted that Tavares Pereira was not related to the MST. Shortly afterwards, the district chief who had contested the official version was removed from the investigation into the case.

This episode is part of a repressive policy towards landless rural laborers, which has become more intense in the past year. In May 1999, the Secretariat of Public Security in Paraná initiated a series of forced eviction of landless settlements. On these occasions, the state government has employed elite elements of the Military Police, such as the Anti-Kidnapping Squad, the Eagle Group, and special operations divisions (Grupo de Operações Especiais, GOE and the COPE) that occupied and cut off access to areas where there were occupations by landless families.

These elements of the Military Police equip themselves with helicopters, squad cars, and trained dogs to attack crowds, undercover police officers, persons with hoods and/or without any identification, ambulances, rifles, shotguns, semi- automatic weapons, tear-gas launchers, and still and video cameras.

On May 5, 1999, the Paraná state government began a large-scale police operation to forcibly evict landless families in the Querência do Norte region in the northwest part of the state. In this region alone, the police carried out 14 evictions in which cases of physical and psychological torture, and serious bodily injuries to adults and children were registered. During these evictions, 41 laborers were arrested; many were beaten and some were tortured. After the evictions, the police burned the belongings, makeshift shelters and food belonging to the landless and destroyed their crops.

Many others were threatened, have had warrants issued for their arrest, and have been hunted like criminals. The Military Police continued in the city of Querência and in other municipalities, stopping people on the streets, threatening them, seizing caps and T-shirts with references to agrarian reform. By use of a list of names, persons considered "suspicious" were interrogated and frequently taken into custody for further investigation.

In this same region, MST settlements have achieved high levels of agricultural production. The 1998-1999 harvest registered the following: 155,000 sacks of corn; 70,000 tons of manioc root (mandioca) , 150,000 sacks of rice, and 4.2 million liters of milk, generating 1.5 million Brazilian reais (or roughly US$ 800,000). These numbers repeat themselves throughout the state of Paraná and reveal the viability of agrarian reform.

Despite this, the totals for the year 1999 as calculated by the Pastoral Land Commission (Comissão Pastoral da Terra, CPT) indicate high levels of violence against rural laborers in the state:

Thirty-five forced evictions of rural properties, some of which were carried out without judicial order, others during the night in operations by special police forces or private militia. (NOTE: Brazilian law only permits evictions to be effectuated during daylight hours). At least eight areas involved rural properties in which expropriation procedures were already in course. These operations were filmed by the Military Police's secret service. The police officer who released the tapes of these films is under protection of the Federal Witness Protection Program.

One-hundred-and-seventy-three laborers arrested, most without arrest warrants.

Two laborers were murdered; two others survived attempts on their lives. In none of these cases has the police inquiry identified those responsible although in the regions in which these crimes were committed, the names of those ordering these killings and attempts is public knowledge.

Twenty cases of death threats.

Six rural laborers arrested and tortured by police officers. Although the law requires that torture is a crime for which bail may not be posted, until the date of this report, no one has been arrested.

More than 50 laborers injured in eviction operations. The offices of the MST and of rural laborers' cooperatives have been subjected to wire-tapping. The Police Internal Affairs Division recognized that this wire-tapping was illegal and publicly condemned it.

The Military Police's Secret Service continues to target the MST in violation of the Constitution, which prohibits the use of this institution against social movements. Political persecution and arrest of CPT attorney Darcy Frigo. Frigo has received death threats and is receiving police protection. Only 880 families, of the government goal of 3,000 families, were settled during the year. There are 80 encampments in the state with more than 9,000 families.

The following declaration taken by the National Network of Autonomous Grass-Roots Attorneys (Rede Nacional Autônoma de Advogados Populares, RENAAP) illustrates the abuses described above:

"I, Geraldo José dos Santos, Brazilian, married, born on July 20, 1914, today 84 years of age, subsistence farmer since the age of seven. I do not know how to read or write. My wife, Maria Rosa Muniz, 77 years of age. We have nine adult children. Some of them were camped with us in the Cobrinco property in Monte Castelo, an area that belongs to the Bradesco Group and which already has an official determination of non-productivity issued by INCRA. We do not have enough money even to buy the medication that we need and we have a debt at the pharmacy. My wife suffers from nerve problems, heart problems and rheumatism.

"We were forcibly evicted—my family and 40 others in the pre-dawn hours on Friday at about 1:30 a.m. We were sleeping when we woke up with all those police officers, hooded, at the entrance. There were about ten men that were not wearing uniforms or hoods. After participating in the whole operation, they helped to destroy our shelters. They jumped over the entrance gate firing guns and throwing [tear gas] bombs and attacked us. Right away I was kicked by a police office in the ribs. Once on the ground, I was kicked again. They forced the men and boys to remain on the cold ground, face down, handcuffed, until 7:00 a.m. They demolished our shelters. They stole money from the landless and they made fun of us.

"They beat several of us and others were burned by the bombs. A lot of people are afraid to speak up because of the police. One of my sons, who is more than 50-years-old and has a heart problem, was lost in the brush for almost two days from the moment he fled to avoid being beaten by the police. Another son owns an old tractor and has worked with it for more than ten years. Everyone knows that. But the police said that it was stolen and they won't return it. I borrowed R$162 [about US 135] with interest to plant beans. We had 120 hectares but a lot of that has been fenced in by the landowner.

"I am in the Monte Castelo Hospital with a broken rib and I am urinating blood. I feel a lot of pain when I move."

Statement given to Cristiane de Lima Martins, Bar Member No. 9.755

Another statement describes the violence against rural laborers in the encampment on the Santa Maria estate in the Ortigueira region:

"On April 26, 1999, we occupied the Santa Maria [estate] with about 30 families. Three days later, a group of 30 heavily armed police arrived there, accompanied by two judicial officers. The police forced us to sit on the ground and they threatened our families to get information about the leaders of the MST. The most sought-after was Adnilson, but he was not at the occupation at that time. The police took one landless away and disappeared with him. After 30 minutes, another police officer came back to look for Lourival.

"An hour later, the commander of the operation, Edmauro Assunção, arrived looking for me. A soldier from the P2 [undercover police division] took me behind the estate house while they brought Lourival without my being able to see him. Afterwards I found out that he had been tortured. Then they took me to the cow pasture area. There they had big water tanks that the cattle used to drink water.

"They made me kneel so that I would tell them who were the leaders that organized the MST in the region and where was the silver-colored Volkswagen bug, a car used by the MST. When I said that I was a day- laborer and that I had just arrived at the property and that I didn't know anything, they began to torture me. They tortured me for two and a half hours, from 11:00 a.m. until 1:30 p.m. I was handcuffed—my arms are still full of scars from the handcuffs. The torture was near-drowning, near-hanging, beating, stepping on my stomach, they took off my clothes and threatened to rape me with a branch [from a sugar cane plant]. After they made me run so that they could kill me—I didn't run.

"They made me kneel in front of a pile of cow dung that had just been defecated and they made me eat about a half-kilo (one pound) of manure. After they took me to the police vehicle where the others who had been arrested were being held. There were three who were tortured: me, Lourival and Aristides. Those who tortured us were the Special Operations Group (Grupo de Operações Especiais, GOE) and the P2 (Military Police Secret Service). We arrived at the police district in Ortigueira at 3:00 p.m., almost paralyzed. The district chief (delegada) appeared to support us and reprimanded the Military Police. After they called the judge so that we could report the torture. She asked us to identify the police officers but the GOE and the P2 had already left.

"So the judge ordered the police at the district to complete the arrest report [for us]. But that's a mistake because the GOE arrested us but the police in the district wrote the arrest report. Then they reinforced the security at the district until they transferred us. On the day of the transfer, the same police that had tortured us were there to take us. That's when we realized that our lives were in danger. We called the district chief and explained that we would not leave the jail with the same police that had tortured us. Even the district chief was apprehensive.

"He got another car, a Santana Quantum. We asked for a judicial officer and a civil police officer to accompany us. There were eight of us in the car from Ortigueira to Ponta Grossa. We're prisoners in the jail in Ponta Grossa, which is overcrowded. It's horrible here. This isn't for human beings. We're afraid that the GOE will come into the jail and kill us. There are six of us from the encampment imprisoned here.

Valdecir Bordignon Member of the State Committee of the MST

THE MASSACRE OF ELDORADO DOS CARAJÁS

On April 17, 1996, at about 3:00 p.m., several buses arrived at the encampment of 1,500 rural laborers at the "S- curve" between Eldorado dos Carajás and Marabá in Pará state. Under the command of Maj. José Pereira de Oliveira, commander of the Tenth CIPM and the First CIPMOA, two buses and a truck arriving from the city of Paraupebas, brought 68 men, armed with two shotguns, four machine guns, 50 rifles and revolvers. On the opposite side of the road, three buses arrived. Under the command of Cel. Mário Colares Pantoja, commander of the Fourth Battalion of the Military Police, 200 men equipped with machine guns and revolvers arrived.

None of the police were identified. They had left their required Velcro tags in the barracks. The Marabá Battalion, under the command of Cel. Mário Colares Pantoja arrived firing gas canisters. At the beginning, the laborers resisted the attack, throwing rocks and sticks. However, when they heard the first shots, they retreated. The massacre lasted roughly an hour. Nineteen laborers were killed and 69 were injured.

The following laborers were killed:

1. ALTAMIRO RICARDO DA SILVA, 42
2. ANTONIO COSTA DIAS, 27
3. RAIMUNDO LOPES PEREIRA, 20
4. LEONARDO BATISTA DE ALMEIDA, 46
5. GRACIANO OLÍMPIO DE SOUZA, 46
6. JOSÉ RIBAMAR ALVES DE SOUZA, 22
7. OZIEL ALVES PEREIRA, 17
8. MANOEL GOMES DE SOUZA, 49
9. LOURIVAL DA COSTA SANTANA, 26
10. ANTÔNIO ALVES DA CRUZ, 59
11. ABÍLIO ALVES RABELO, 57
12. JOÃO CARNEIRO DA SILVA
13. ANTÔNIO ( known as "IRMÃO")
14. JOSÉ ALVES DA SILVA, 65
15. ROBSON VÍTOR SOBRINHO, 25
16. AMÂNCIO DOS SANTOS SILVA, 42
17. VALDEMIR FERREIRA DA SILVA
18. JOAQUIM PEREIRA VERAS, 32
19. JOÃO RODRIGUES DE ARAÚJO

Since that time, two other laborers have died as a result of injuries sustained during the massacre, Francisco Divino da Silva and João Batista Penha. Those with more serious injuries were transferred to the Servidores Hospital in the state capital Belém. These were: José Carlos Moreira dos Santos, 16, shot in the left side of the head and with possible brain damage; Rubenita Justiano da Silva, shot in the mouth, fractured left maxilar. Others include: Elyomar Pereira da Silva, Domingos dos Reis da Conceição, Marcos Pereira da Silva, José da Natividade, Nilson Pereira de Souza and Michael Jackson Barbosa, were all operated on due to fractured bones in their legs or feet. The attorneys and social workers who sought to speak with those injured were prohibited access by order of the Secretary of Public Security which decreed that only family members could visit persons injured in the incident. When, finally, access was permitted, it could be seen that the injured were accompanied by police and were being treated like criminals.

The first phase of the trial of the 150 police charged with involvement in the massacre took place in August 1999, when three commissioned officers who commanded the operation were acquitted. Attorneys for the MST filed a writ to remove presiding judge Ronaldo Valle from the case and another appeal to annul the decision of the trial. In April 2000, Judge Ronaldo Valle submitted a request to be removed from the case to the Chief Justice (President) of the State Supreme Court (Tribunal de Justiça). On April 11, 2000 the State Supreme Court decided to annul the decision acquitting the three officers. On April 24, 2000, the State Supreme Court named a new judge to preside over the case. The new judge is José Maria Teixeira do Rosário. This judge has already decided several cases involving rural landless laborers; all of his decisions have been contrary to the MST.

There is a legal error with the naming of this judge to the case. Shortly after Teixeira do Rosário expressed his interest in presiding over the case, the Supreme Court assigned him to the case. This method of indication violates the principle of "natural judge" embodied in the Constitution. This method also violates article 8 (1) of the American Convention on Human Rights which states, "Every person has the right to a hearing, with due guarantees and within a reasonable time, by a competent, independent and impartial tribunal, previously established by law…" The judge here, José Maria Teixeira do Rosário, manifested interest in presiding over the trial before being assigned by the State Supreme Court. His expression of interest casts doubt on his impartiality, thus placing at risk the guarantees of a fair trial.

Another matter which must be considered is the fact that all the jurors who will decide the case are residents of Belém. The Military Police is charged with providing security for all those who live in the State of Pará including the jurors and the presiding judge. Any police officer may encounter a given juror on the street, at work or out of work and may pressure that juror to acquit his fellow officers. Should one of the jurors request security, he or she may be pressured to acquit the other officers. The 150 officers charged with involvement in the incident continue active on the police force which allows them to create undue pressure.

This document known as National Report on the Situation of Human Rights and Agrarian Reform in Brazil was presented on the occasion of the visit of Her Excellency Mrs. Mary Robinson, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights to São Paulo, Brazil, on May 17, 2000.

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