Brazilian Indians Reoccupy Area Invaded by Sugar Cane Farmers

A Brazilian Indian woman with her child Tired of waiting for the demarcation of their lands, the Potiguara Indians, in the municipality of Rio Tinto, in the Brazilian northeastern state of Paraí­ba, repossessed part of their land, which had been invaded by a sugar cane mill. The area used to be occupied by the Rafaela Ranch.

Around 50 families – 150 people – have been camped out since 19 March and are working on building houses and farming the land. Repossession began at the start of February, without any human occupation.

The indigenous people tore up the sugar cane and planted food crops such as beans, cassava, yams, corn and vegetables. On March 20 the first house was concluded.

A land repossession order has already been issued, but the situation there is calm.

In August 2003, the Potiguara repossessed the land then occupied by the Japungu mill, after the mill owners had tried to drive a tractor over the people's farmland to increase the area for planting sugar cane. Since the repossession, the Potiguara have been living and producing food in the area.

Ever since the 1970s, the Potiguara lands have been invaded by plantations of sugar cane, which is used in the production of ethanol and sugar by the mills that have been set up in the region, as a result of the incentives offered by the Proálcool program.

At that time, along with promises of employment, the mills brought deforestation, a reduction in the area of farmland, and the poisoning of the mangrove swamps where the community used collect shellfish and crabs to eat and sell.

The Potiguara land lies in the municipalities of Rio Tinto, Marcação and Baí­a da Traição. The demarcation of some parts of this people's land (the Jacaré de São Domingos and Potiguara lands) has already been concluded. The Potiguara de Monte Mor land, occupying 7,487 hectares, has been identified, but is still the object of legal disputes.

This repossession has been consolidated in the same week that President Lula – who has presented biodiesel as a new major product for the country to export – called the sugar cane producers "heroes".

"The cane mill owners, who ten years ago, were considered the agribusiness bandits in this country, are turning into national and worldwide heroes because the world has its eye on the ethanol", the President said during the inauguration of an industry in Goiás.

Cimi – Indianist Missionary Council

Tags:

You May Also Like

Signs of Slower Pace of Interest Cuts Make Brazilian Stocks Tumble Down

Brazilian stocks headed lower together with Mexican shares that dropped on profit taking following ...

A locomotive from the Vale do Rio Doce company

Brazil’s Mining Giant CVRD to Use Biofuel in Its Trains

The president of Petrobras Distribuidora (BR), Graça Foster, and the logistics executive director at ...

Mori Sushi, Japanese cuisine in Brazil

Brazilian Sushi Is for Export Now

It is not from today that Japanese cuisine is successful in Brazil. In São ...

Exports Bring Brazil US$ 769 Million Surplus

Brazil’s balance of payments (the country’s total revenues minus its outlays) showed a US$ ...

Brazil-US Phone Call: Bush Receptive to Lula’s Summit Proposal

According to the Brazilian Minister of Foreign Relations, Celso Amorim, the President of the ...

Brazil and Mercosur Shooting for a 2006 Trade Agreement with EU

A top official in the European Union says she hopes the Biregional Association Agreement ...

It Was the World’s Second Biggest Bank Heist Ever. But in Brazil Nobody Saw a Thing.

The story of Brazil’s biggest bank heist ever starts like this: Three months ago ...

After Another Production Record Brazil May Become Self Sufficient in Oil in 2005

Petrobras reached in May an average monthly production of 1 million 729 thousand barrels ...

Brazilian bishop Luiz Flávio Cappio on the border of the São Francisco river

Brazilian Bishop Again Opposes Lula Over River Transposition

Brazilian Bishop Luiz Flávio Cappio sent a new letter to the Planalto Place in ...

Brazil’s Lula Launches Plan to Boost Productivity and Solidarity

In a nationwide radio and TV broadcast on Monday, January 16, Brazilian President Luiz ...