Bazilian NGOs Urge Lula to Up State Presence in the Amazon

Various non-governmental organizations (NGOs) addressed a letter yesterday to President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva requesting an effective State presence in the Amazon.

The organizations also staged a demonstration in front of the Presidential Palace in Brasí­lia to recall Sister Dorothy Stang’s struggle on behalf of the peoples of the forest and to call for peace in the countryside.


Sister Dorothy, who was killed by six gunshot wounds on February 12 of this year in Anapu, Pará, in the North of Brazil, would have turned 74 yesterday.


In the document sent to the President, the NGOs urged that federal government organs be beefed up to ensure an end to violence and impunity in the Amazon.


One of the Greenpeace representatives, Carlos Rittl, believes that very little has changed since Dorothy Stang’s death.


“Despite all the commotion over Sister Dorothy’s assassination, things haven’t changed much. The people who live there continue to be persecuted.”


He says that the federal government must adopt more concrete measures. “We are presenting the government with clear demands for it to guarantee people’s security and acknowledge the demands of the communities and the rights of the peoples of the forest.”


The letter asks for the territorial organization and property regularization of community areas in the state of Pará to be carried out, as well as the listing of rural properties, for the region’s conservation units to be implemented.


The document also asks for Rural and Extractive Family Production to be fortified to be able to resist the expansion of entrepreneurial agricultural.


Another request is that Sister Dorothy Stang’s murder trial be transferred to the federal court system.


Today, the Federal Appeals Court is expected to decide whether to transfer the case to the federal sphere.


“The impunity of the crimes that have occurred in Pará give no hope that state courts are capable of bringing everyone involved in the case to judgment. Thus we believe that justice will only be done through federalizing the case,” Rittl said.


Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

Landless’s Invasions Hinder Reforms, Says Brazil’s Minister

Brazil’s Minister of Agrarian Development, Miguel Rossetto, criticized the invasions organized by the Landless ...

Brazil President’s Complaints in Germany and Now to Obama Are Not Making Her Friends

Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff, at the meeting yesterday at the White House with president ...

Brazil Ends Tax for Over 1000 Drugs

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva signed May 19 a decree that exempts ...

Brazil Ready to Stay 10 Years in Haiti

Brazilian General Augusto Heleno Ribeiro, commander of the United Nations Peace Forces in Haiti, ...

Fueled by Ethanol and Phone Rates Brazil’s Inflation Goes Up to 6.30%

Mid month thirty days consumer prices index in Brazil accelerated to 0.28% during August ...

A hospital breather made in Brazil

Medical Equipment Is a US$ 6.5 Bi Industry in Brazil Exporting to 100 Countries

Brazil's medical, hospital, and dental equipment industry should increase its sales to the Arab ...

In Rural Brazil When You Need “Justice” You Just Hire Your Hit Men

An ambush on April 16, 2009, carried out by agents of a private security ...

Guerrilla Sound

While in the U.S. payroll costs to employers are 9% over the cost of ...

Brazil’s Petrobras Overtakes Shell to Become World’s 4th Largest Energy Co

Brazilian state-controlled oil and gas multinational Petrobras has risen from the ninth to the ...

Egypt Chicken Import Gives Brazil a Shot in the Arm

Brazil has started exporting large volumes of chicken meat to the Egyptian market. According ...

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