UN Gets Report on Land That Was Rejected by Brazil’s Congress

The author (relator) of a Brazil’s Parliamentary Investigative Commission report on Land Conflicts (Comissão Parlamentar Mista de Inquérito (CPMI) da Terra), deputy João Alfredo (P-SOL, Ceará state), has sent a copy of his report, which was rejected by the CPI, to Hina Jilani, the UN special representative for human rights.

Alfredo’s report, among other things, called for strengthening the Land Reform Institute (Incra), but was voted down because it was seen by some members of the CPI as interfering with land property rights.

"The report was sent to the UN because it deals with the problems of private militias [run by landowners] and the [right wing] União Democrática Ruralista (UDR), along with the defenders of land reform who face death threats. It seeks to get the government to take action and protect the weak from the stronger," explained deputy João Alfredo.

On the same day that Alfredo’s report was rejected, another report, written by deputy Alberto Lupion (PFL, Paraná), was approved in the CPI by a vote of 12 to 1.

It proposes a law that would classify land invasions as acts of terrorism. The Landless Rural Worker Movement (MST) regularly promotes land invasions by its members to pressure for land reform in Brazil.

Alfredo attacked the approved report, saying it did not reflect the reality in the Brazilian countryside or present a solution for the country’s agrarian problems.

"On the contrary," said Alfredo, "by making the activities of a social movement criminal activities it just makes the conflict more acute and maintains privileges."

After receiving the report, Hina Jilani declared that she was sorry it had been rejected. She pointed out that the UN Declaration of Human Rights protects social movements. "There has to be a right to protest and it must be protected," she said.

Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

For Brazil, US and EU Farm Subsidies and Not Biofuels Are the Villain

The president of Brazil, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, made an impassioned defense of ...

Reducing Work to 40 Hours a Week in Brazil Without Lowering Wages Is Smart and Fair

To transform the unequal and unjust structures of our society was always one of ...

Brazil Needs to Invest US$ 88 Billion in Energy Sector to Keep Growing

The Brazilian Ten-Year Plan (2007/2017) announced this week by the EPE (Energy Research Company), ...

Mind Straitjacket

Brazilian scholars ape foreign trends in order to be seen as more up-to-date. This ...

Brazil Central Bank’s Chief Sees GDP Growing Over 5% This Year

The most recent weekly analyst survey of the Brazilian Central Bank  shows Brazil’s economy ...

Brazil Might Leave Bolivia and Appeal to International Court

Brazilian Energy Minister Silas Rondeau said yesterday, October 23, there has been progress in ...

A Club Spreads Arab Culture in Brazil

A series of cultural events are going to officially open the activities of the ...

Brazilian Lock Maker Knocks on Arab Doors

Brazil's lock and doorknob manufacturer Lockwell, which owns a factory in the capital of ...

High Fever

Shanty towns and poor neighborhoods were more affected by the dengue outbreak. But in ...

In Brazil, All Is Allowed… After the Elections

There are those in Brazil who believe that the government will propose in November, ...