Brazil’s Landless Double Invasions to Become Part of Presidential Campaign

Brazil's MST movementThe recent sharp increase in activity by Brazil’s Landless Rural Worker Movement (MST), as part of its regular annual Red April invasions to protest the landownership situation in Brazil, is all about getting the issue into the presidential election debate, says Clifford Welch, a history teacher at the Federal University of São Paulo (Unifesp).

“They just want to make sure their agenda gets on the agenda of the presidential candidates,” says Welch.

So far this month, traditionally a month of MST activity because it is the anniversary of a massacre of rural workers by police (April 1996), there have been 68 invasions of rural properties (double the number of invasions last year), along with the occupation of government buildings, most of them housing the agency that oversees land reform, the National Institute of Settlement and Land Reform (“Colonização e Reforma Agrária” – Incra)  

Agrarian reform in English has a broad meaning that goes beyond land reform  to  improved farming methods and productivity. One of the serious shortcomings of land reform in Brazil is that neither the government or the MST have ever managed to combine land and agrarian reform.

Another red button issue as far as the MST is concerned and landowner farmers, as well is an update of “productivity indexes.” In Brazil, if a piece of land is not productive as per a productivity index it can be confiscated for land reform – that is, given to landless rural workers. The last time the index was modified was in 1976, which is why the MST is upset.

April 21st, a national holiday in Brazil, celebrating Tiradentes Day, a leader of a failed independence movement, MST militants joined protest groups representing former slaves, Afro-Brazilians and Indians in calling for a serious discussion of the land problem in Brazil.

All these groups were part of a huge protest demonstration in the center of São Paulo. One of the MST directors, Gilmar Mauro, reflecting a shift in the MST position, declared that land reform is not just about ownership, but “the role of the land, natural resources and food… We want to see farmers growing food that is good for people’s health, strong family farms and the protection of the environment.”

The P-SOL presidential candidate, Plínio de Arruda Sampaio, speaking at the MST rally declared that land reform was a serious matter that should be a part of all political platforms and the absence of other presidential candidates at the rally showed they were not involved in the important issue of landownership in Brazil.

Sampaio said that his party considered it one of the principal issues. “This is a Brazilian theme song. It is the most important issue in the country,” he declared.

ABr

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil Calls US Interference on Boeing Crash Inquiry “Inopportune and Useless”

Brazil’s Defense Minister,  Waldir Pires, has condemned the pressure exerted by American authorities on ...

Kerry or Bush, Brazil Will Get the Stick

Brazilian historian, Robson Arrais commented that the election results in Latin America should not ...

Nigeria’s Debt Forgiveness Made Official by Brazil

Brazil will receive only US$ 67.3 million of the US$ 150.4 million owed to ...

Good Prospects for Brazil Don’t Prevent Market Fall

Latin American stocks slumped again this Wednesday, March 8, amid ongoing concerns over rising ...

Brazil Has 100,000 Caves and Very Little Protection for Them

Brazil is starting a national program for conservation of caves this week. The Brazilian ...

TAM’s Jets Back in Brazil from Middle East Will Fly to NY and London

Brazilian Airline TAM will receive by October three aircraft Airbus A330 that had been ...

A Manaus No One Talks About

Manaus is much more than just a jumping off point for eco-tours and fishing ...

A Brazilian CD Sings Lullabies in 12 Languages

The Lebanese Marie Nabhan has been living in Brazil since 1978, but when her ...

Change or I’ll Live, Chávez Tells Brazil and Mercosur

Venezuela is interested in becoming a member of a “new Mercosur,” but if there’s ...

Brazil’s Dengue Epidemic Cuts Tourism by 20%

Brazilian authorities for the first time are admitting that the dengue epidemic in Brazil ...