2023-09-22 00:21:03
– Victory of the indigenous people during a crucial trial for their lands
The thesis of the “temporal framework”, defended by the powerful agro-business lobby, was rejected Thursday by the Supreme Court at the end of a historic trial for indigenous peoples.
Published today at 02:21 Updated 40 minutes ago
Gathered under a large tent in front of the Supreme Court, hundreds of indigenous demonstrators, some with their bodies painted and their heads topped with feathers, followed the debates on a giant screen.
AFP
The indigenous peoples of Brazil, starting with those of the Amazon, won an important victory on Thursday: following a trial started in 2021, the Supreme Court confirmed their right to their lands, rejecting the positions defended by the powerful agro-trading sector.
The issue was all the more crucial as the reserves allocated to indigenous people are considered by scientists as bulwarks once morest deforestation and therefore play a key role in the fight once morest global warming.
The majority was reached on Thursday when a sixth magistrate, out of the eleven who sit on the highest court in the country, voted once morest the thesis of the “temporal framework”, during this long-term trial which began in August 2021 and suspended for several times. Three other judges then voted once morest it. Results: nine votes once morest, two for.
Cheers
Gathered under a large tent in front of the Supreme Court, hundreds of indigenous demonstrators, some with their bodies painted and their heads topped with feathers, followed the debates on a giant screen. When the majority was reached, some burst into cries of joy and dance moves, while others hugged their neighbor.
The thesis of the “temporal framework”, defended by the powerful agro-business lobby in the name of the “legal security” of the operators, proposes to recognize as lands rightfully belonging to the indigenous people only those which they occupied or officially claimed. at the time of the promulgation of the Constitution in 1988. However, the indigenous people explain that certain territories were no longer occupied by them at that time because they had been expelled, notably under the last military dictatorship (1964-1985).
According to the NGO Socio-Environmental Institute (ISA), almost a third of the more than 700 indigenous reserves already demarcated in Brazil (the majority in the Amazon) might have been affected.
“Debt impossible to pay”
The only two magistrates favorable to the thesis defended by agro-business were appointed by Jair Bolsonaro. The latter, whose mandate was marked by an outbreak of deforestation, had promised not to “give one more centimeter” to indigenous peoples.
Approvals of new reserves remained at a standstill for more than five years, until Lula’s return to power, who legalized six new ones in April, then two others at the beginning of September. Of the more than 700 reserves already demarcated in Brazil, almost a third of them have not yet been officially approved.
The trial at the Supreme Court, which will set a precedent, relates more specifically to the case of the Ibirama-Laklano territory, in the state of Santa Catarina (south), which lost its status as an indigenous reserve of the Xokleng people in 2009, at the following a judgment of a lower court. The judges then justified their decision by explaining that these lands were not occupied by indigenous people in 1988.
“I am very emotional because my grandfather fought a lot for this and he is no longer here to see it,” said Txului Namblá, an 18-year-old Xokleng girl.
Compensation
Supreme Court justices have yet to find consensus on pending issues, including possible state compensation for owners of land that would be transformed into reserves in the future.
This alternative solution to the “temporal framework” is proposed by the powerful judge Alexandre de Moraes, but it is rejected by the natives. They fear in particular that case law on the subject of compensation will slow down the approval of new reservations, because they would represent a high cost for the State.
Brazil has nearly 1.7 million indigenous people, living on or off reserves, or 0.83% of the population, according to figures from the latest census.
Did you find an error? Please report it to us.
0 comments
1695344468
#Brazil #Victory #indigenous #people #crucial #trial #land