Trial of Gunmen Accused of Murdering US Nun Starts in Brazil

The trial of two of the five hired gunmen and mentors in the murder of the American nun, Dorothy Stang, begins today in the city of Belém, capital of the state of Pará, in northern Brazil.

The opening session will be attended by the head of the Special Secretariat of Human Rights, minister Mário Mamede, and the special UN representative for Human Rights Defense, Hina Jilani.

Stang was a social activist and environmentalist who worked many years in small rural communities in the area of Anapu, Pará, helping the poor in their struggle to obtain land rights and create sustainable development projects that did not destroy natural resources. She died in February from six gunshot wounds.

At the end of September, in a trip to Brazil, David Stang, brother of Stang, said that he was confused because he thought the investigation into his sister’s death had been completed. But at a meeting with the ministers of Justice, Márcio Thomaz Bastos, and Agrarian Development, Miguel Rossetto, he was informed that the investigation was going on.

"We were in Belém (capital of the state of Pará) to see what the authorities had done. They did not give us any assistance, but we thought the investigation had been completed. Now we are in Brasí­lia and the ministers pat us on the back and assure us that justice will be done," he said.

A family lawyer, Brent Rushforth, says that it seems there are at least three more landowners who may have been involved in the Dorothy Stang crime.

"The world is waiting to see if there is justice in Pará," he declared, adding that over the last 33 years a total of 772 rural workers have been killed in the region around Anapu, Pará, but only three landowners were ever actually charged with murder.

Two of them have disappeared and the other one, the only one to go on trial, is serving a house arrest sentence in his comfortable home in Goiânia, capital of the state of Goiás.

Dorothy Stang, an American nun from Ohio who had lived in Brazil for over 30 years, was a prominent activist in the Amazon region.

She participated in the struggle for sustainable development in the Amazon rainforest, denouncing illegal lumbering operations, fraudulent land deals and violence against the poor rural workers. Up to now five men have been arrested for her murder. They are in jail in Belém.

ABr

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazilian Shares Rebound After Interest Rate Cut

Latin American shares ended higher today, June 1st, with Brazil and Mexico rallying to ...

A Reluctant Hero

By Brazzil Magazine "This is my bible, I read this book every day in ...

Brazil Joins 40-Country Network to Fight Bird Flu

Beginning next week, bird flu specialists from 40 countries will be linked through an ...

Brazil’s Package to Boost Economy Includes 1 Million New Homes

Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, the president of Brazil, said that his administration will ...

LETTERS

By Brazzil Magazine In a time of an unfortunate crisis Brazil is still very ...

Kids from Brazil. How Cool Are They?

Life in Brazil and in Rio, in particular, tends to be more focused on ...

Brazil’s Development Bank Lends US$ 14.8 Billion

The Brazilian Development Bank (BNDES) spent US$ 14.8 billion in loans last year. According ...

US Biotech Giant Monsanto Buys Brazilian Hybrid Corn Producer

US-headquartered biotechnology multinational Monsanto announced that it has acquired Agroeste Sementes, a leading Brazilian ...

Brazil’s Petrobras Raises to US$ 7.1 Bi Its Investments Overseas

Brazil’s state oil company Petrobras plans to invest US$ 7.1 billion abroad over the ...

Indian’s Old Dad

Located in the northwest of Brazil, Roraima, which was upgraded from territory to state ...