In Brazilian Courts Little Has Changed Since US Nun’s Murder

Social movements and human rights groups suffered yet another defeat this month at the hands of the local and federal government authorities regarding the murder case of Sister Dorothy Stang.

Two hired gunmen shot and killed Stang on February 12, 2005. Stang, an American religious sister, had been working with the poor and environmental concerns, often conflicting with large landowners and loggers in the area.


Several times she went to local authorities to denounce death threats against her and the leaders of the communities with whom she worked.


The justice system in the state in which she was murdered, Pará, is notoriously slow and corrupt when it comes to bringing the rich and powerful to justice.


This is the same state in which only two out of over hundred police officers were convicted for the 1996 Massacre of Eldorado dos Carajás in which 19 rural workers were killed and many others wounded.


The trial of the two officers was only completed last year. Less notorious trials of the rich and powerful get held up for years and rarely end up in convictions. Because of this, human rights lawyers pushed for the case to be moved to a federal arena.


On June 8, the request was denied. The federal judges said that in this case, the state authorities acted in an efficient and timely manner, arresting the suspects in record time.


The human rights lawyers state that this was only because of the international attention that the case received and the fact that their was a motion for the case to be heard before federal judges.


Now, various entities are going to analyze other cases which have been held up for years, and bring them to authorities to make them federal cases.


Meanwhile, repression continues against landless workers in Pará.


At the beginning of this month, the governor of the state, Simão Jatene, ordered the expulsion of 20,000 landless workers off land located in the southern part of the state.


A police force of 280 burned houses, destroyed crops, beat several workers, and made death threats. They did not even give the families time to gather their belongings nor food that they had just harvested.


SEJUP – Brazilian Service of Justice and Peace – www.sejup.org

Tags:

You May Also Like

Gunman Shoots Brazilian Journalist Who Denounced Gaming Mafia and Police

France-based press-freedom organization Reporters Without Borders is condemning a murder attempt against Brazilian journalist ...

Brazilian Bar Association Calls for Removal or Arrest of Brasília’s Governor

Ophir Cavalcante, president of Brazil’s National Bar Association (OAB), has sent the government’s chief ...

The Poetry that Grows in the Brazilian Jungle

Poetry mixed with Lebanese origins, memories of childhood and of Amazonian legends. Jorge Tufic ...

Brian Smith, president of Coca-Cola of Brazil with the Brazilian line of products

Coca-Cola Is Betting on Brazil’s Thirst

When the political crisis in Brazil first gave signs that it would be around ...

By Contract Bolivia Can Only Raise Gas Prices Every 5 Years, Says Brazil’s Lula

Speaking to the Brazilian people on his weekly radio program, Breakfast with the President, ...

Paraguay Makes Its Case for a Fair Deal with Brazil on Itaipu

Paraguay, which is a landlocked country, will make public in Uruguay and Spain, its ...

‘I Won’t Quarrel with Chavez, He’s My Friend,’ Says Brazil’s Lula

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva admitted Friday, July 6, the existence of ...

Another Confirmation of Brazil Government’s Graft Scandal

A former BrasÀ­lia (capital of Brazil) deputy governor revealed it was known that members ...

This Crisis Won’t Kill, It Will Only Make Brazil Stronger, Minister Believes

Dilma Rousseff, the Chief of Staff of Brazilian president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, ...

Uncertainty Over New Finance Chief Drags Brazilian Market Down

Latin American stocks tumbled, with Brazilian shares posting the biggest losses, amid concerns about ...