The families of the Movement of Dam Victims (MAB) will remain camped outside the headquarters of the Interamerican Development Bank (IDB) until next week.
The information was given by one of the movement’s coordinators, Rosana Mendes.
“The Bank’s directors say they only negotiate with us after we leave the place. And we will not leave. That’s why they told us they will only give answers to our requests next week,” reveals Mendes.
She confirmed that IDB’s directorate promised to pay for the group’s meals while protest lasts.
Approximately 350 people have been camping in the institution’s gardens in Brasília since May 31. They demand compensations for the construction of the Serra da Mesa and Cana Brava dams, financed by the IDB.
This is the second time that MAB invades the bank. The first was in 2002 and for the same reason: in order to build these dams, most agricultural workers were expelled from the land in which they lived, and were paid insignificant indemnities.
The hydroelectric plants of Serra da Mesa and Cana Brava were built by different companies, but caused similar problems to the affected population. The former has been operating for nine years, and expelled 925 families from their lands.
The few indemnities paid were jointly calculated by the construction companies, Furnas, and by the VBC group (composed of the companies Votorantim, Bradesco, and Camargo Correa).
Cana Brava was built by Belgian multinational Tractebel. The dam dispossessed 986 families of their lands. Tractebel tried to resettle some people, however, settlements did not have electricity, water, or sewage infrastructure.
Agência Brasil
]]>Brazil’s Movement of Dam Victims (MAB), as the name itself expresses, is a social organization to defend the rights of people affected by dam construction.
Electrobrás, the Brazilian company in charge of administering Brazil’s electric system, calculates that over 34 thousand square kilometers – an area bigger than Belgium – have been flooded by dam construction in Brazil.
The total of people affected by dam construction in Brazil amounts to about a million individuals. They lived or worked in areas taken over by reservoirs.
Over 70 thousand people, for example, were affected by the construction of the hydroelectric plants of Tucuruí, state of Pará; Itaparica, state of Bahia, and Itaipu, in Paraná, .
The fight against dams commenced in the decade of the ’70’s, when these projects were implanted in greater scale in Brazil.
The dams of Sobradinho and Itaparica (in Northeast Brazil), Itaipu, Machadinho and Ita (in the South), and Tucuruí (in the North) were constructed during this period.
There were mass protests oppósing the construction of these plants. In 1989, during the First National Meeting of Workers Affected by Dams, a survey was conducted of the experiences of these people.
At the end of the meeting the decision was made to create a national organization in defense of dam victims. The MAB was created in 1991.
Brazil is not the only country with organized representatives who oppose dam construction.
In 1997 the MAB held the First International Meeting of Dam Victims, with representatives from 20 countries.
At the end of the encounter, the participants got together to establish March 14 as the international date of the fight against dams.
Main combat zones:
Implantation of alternative energy sources (wind, solar)
Alternative proposals to dam construction
Popular participation in decisions regarding electric energy
Environmental preservation
Reform of the electric energy sector
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