Brazil Detains 18 People Involved in Murder of Indian Leader

Nísio Gomes The Brazilian police have arrested 18 people accused of killing  an indigenous leader last November. Gunmen shot Nísio Gomes in Mato Grosso do Sul and took away his body, which is still missing.

Police only confirmed his murder last week, after finding that a witness who claimed to have seen him alive had been paid to give false evidence. Gomes, 59, led a Guarani group which had returned to its land after being evicted by ranchers.

A spokesperson for the federal police in Ponta Porã, in the southern state of Mato Grosso do Sul, said they had arrested 10 people belonging to a private security firm suspected of having been hired to attack Mr Gomes’s camp.

The spokesperson said another eight people, six of them landowners, were being held on suspicion of masterminding the attack.

The police official said there had been a breakthrough in the investigation into Mr Gomes’s disappearance when two suspects confessed in exchange for a more lenient sentence. The suspects said they worked for a private security firm and described being hired by a group of eight people to murder the indigenous leader.

Members of Nísio Gomes’s Guarani Kaiowá group had all along described how masked gunmen had broken into their camp and shot their leader in the head, chest, arms and legs, before loading his body into a truck.

Police officials said that “at first we had doubts because there was very little blood in the camp and we had a witness saying he had seen Chief Gomes in Paraguay.”

They said their enquiries showed the witness had been paid to give false evidence.

Medical examiners further said that Mr Gomes could have had a cardiac arrest, which would have explained the small amount of blood at the scene.

The Guarani are the largest indigenous group in Brazil, with approximately 46,000 members spread over seven states. They claim they are frequently forced from their ancestral land by farmers, and receive little or no protection from local authorities.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil’s Azzar, Haidresser to Princesses

The Lebanese coiffeur Georges Azzar, who has worked for three years at one of ...

In Brazil, Industrial Output, Car Sales and Installment Payment on Time Are All Down

In São Paulo, Brazil, the number of people who have fallen behind in making ...

IMF: ‘High Primary Surpluses Still Crucial to Brazil’

International Monetary Fund (IMF) Managing Director Rodrigo de Rato made the following statement today ...

Brazil Olympics: Virus Infested Faeces Main Culprit of Guanabara Bay Pollution

Sewage, garbage and oil leaks. These are the main problems faced by the balmy ...

To Develop Brazil’s Northeast Is Obligation Not Dream, Says Lula

At a last stopover on Monday, January 16, in northeastern Brazil, during visits to ...

China Shows Interest in Building Rio-São Paulo Bullet Train Railway

Brazil and China bolstered their growing ties with trade and investment agreements on Thursday ...

Brazil Wants to Become a Power in Software

Brazil’s Minister of Development, Industry, and Foreign Trade, Luiz Fernando Furlan, affirmed March 9 ...

Brazil’s Chaos Shouldn’t Scare Investors Off, Says Peugeot Citroen

The attacks by a drug Mafia in São Paulo, Brazil, which have caused 91 ...

COVER STORY – Nevermore? – Brazil’s Dictatorship

Nevermore? Eleven years after Brazil’s military handed power back to civilians and returned to ...

Brazzil Joins Pearl Travel Guides to Bring You a Brazil You Haven’t Seen Before

Brazzil Travel is a new publication from the Brazzil group of sites. It has ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`