Brazil: 19 Years Later 3 Men Accused of Murdering Missionary Stand Trial

Nineteen years after the murder of Vicente Cañas Costa, a Jesuit missionary who lived with the Enawenê-Nawê people in the state of Mato Grosso, the man behind the murder and the two men who carried it out will stand trial.

The trial is scheduled to begin October 24 in Cuiabá, state of Mato Grosso, and it can set a remarkable example in the struggle to put an end to impunity in Brazil.

The crime was committed because Cañas supported the demarcation of the Enawenê-Nawê land and worked to ensure the availability of health care services to these people.

Two other men who were also reportedly behind the crime have died already. The lawsuit against the third defendant expired because of his old age.

Therefore, Ronaldo Antônio Osmar, a former chief of police in the city of Juí­na, where the crime was committed, Martinez Abadio da Silva and José Vicente da Silva will stand jury trial for aggravated homicide in exchange for money and in an ambush.

The penalties for aggravated homicide can vary from twelve to thirty years in prison. Former chief of police Ronaldo will also be judged for aggravating circumstances, since it is believed that he promoted or organized a cooperation scheme for committing the crime, as he led the criminal activity of the other people involved in it.

Vicente Cañas lived with the Enawenê people for 10 years. He took part in the first contacts between the group and non-indigenous people in 1974. He accompanied them in their traditional fishing and agricultural activities and in other daily activities.

In a region where verminosis was commonplace, he acted to prevent verminosis-related diseases. He organized immunization campaigns repeatedly to prevent infectious-contagious diseases such as measles, which decimated so many other indigenous groups in Brazil. The population of the Enawenê-Nawê amounted to 97 people when they were first contacted. Today, it amounts to 430 people.

He also fought for the demarcation of their traditional lands, which farmers who settled in the region coveted for, and was an official member of a Funai’s working group set up to identify their indigenous territory. For this reason, the competence for judging the defendants was transferred to a federal court.

After receiving death threats because of his commitment to ensuring the survival of the Enawenê-Nawê people, Vicente Cañas was a victim of the ambition and violence of farmers, who stabbed him to death in 1987 as he was getting ready to visit an indigenous village to take medicines there.

His murderers left him agonizing in pain in front of his tent and ran away through trails in the forest to the farm of one of the men who hired them to kill him.

His body was found only about forty days later. The investigations lasted for six years and the fact that the defendants were involved was revealed by indigenous people belonging to the Rikbaktsa group (canoeiros), who live in lands close to those of the Enawenê-Nawê.

Tags:

You May Also Like

KFC tries again to win Brazil

After Past Decade’s Failure, KFC Once Again Tries to Win Brazilians

KFC first tried to establish itself in Brazil during the 1990s. That attempt, however, ...

Judge in Brazil Bars Suit for Kidnap and Torture Against Dictatorship-Era Army Officer

The first charges brought against an army officer over crimes committed during the Brazil’s ...

Arabs Seek Trade Agreements with Minas Gerais, Brazil

The president of the Arab Brazilian Chamber of Commerce (CCAB), Antonio Sarkis Jr., and ...

Higher Interests in US Lower Brazilian Shares

Latin American markets returned early gains, following U.S. markets lower, after a U.S. Federal ...

Brazil’s HDI Marginally Up, with 11.6% of Illiteracy and 70.5 For Life Expectancy

Brazil’s Human Development Index (HDI) improved between 2002 and 2003, rising from 0.79 to ...

Cargo and Foreign Routes Bring Brazil’s TAM 10% Boost in Revenues

Brazil's flagship airline TAM ended last year with a 10% increase in gross revenues, ...

Brazil’s 10-Million Ad Blitz to Make Chicken into a National Symbol

A US$ 10 million campaign is being elaborated by advertising agency Young & Rubicam ...

Bolivia Upheaval Doesn’t Scare Brazil’s Petrobras. For Now.

The president of Brazilian oil giant Petrobras, José Eduardo Dutra, affirmed that the political ...

Bush: ‘The US Is a Friend of Brazil’

The following is a transcript of remarks by US President, George W. Bush, and ...

She Is a Bridge Between Movie Making in Brazil and Movie Showing in the US

Adriana Dutra is a dreamer, no doubt about that. The difference between Adriana and ...