Brazil, Latin America: Week in Review
Brazil Promises More Protection To Activists In The Amazon After Recent Killings
May 31, 2011 By Staff
Today in Latin America
Top Story — Following a meeting on Monday, the Brazilian government said that it plans to protect rural activists and increase policing in the Amazon rain forest after a recent upsurge in violence toward activists due to disputes over illegal logging.
Led by Brazilian Vice President Michel Temer, the meeting brought together Brazil’s ministers of environment, justice, rural development and human rights to help foster cooperation between the federal and state governments in an effort the quell the violence. Later this week meetings will be held with the governors of the states of Pará, Amazonas and Roraima in the capital, Brasilia.
“The federal government will not hold back on efforts to bring peace to the region,” said Justice Minister Luiz Paulo Barreto. He added that Brazil’s government will analyze all the cases on a list compiled by the Catholic Land Pastoral (CPT) watchdog group.
According to the CPT, more than 1,150 rural activists have been killed in Brazil over the past 20 years. The murders have been linked to gunmen hired by loggers, ranchers and farmers to silence protest over the illegal logging of forests.
Last week rubber tapper José Claudio Ribeiro da Silva and his wife Maria do Espírito Santo da Silva were shot down by gunman in a small city in the northern state of Pará. News of the murders came hours before Brazil’s lower house voted 273 to 182 to pass a controversial bill to reform the Forest Code.
The measure would allow small farmers more liberty to cultivate and deforest protected environmental areas in the Amazon forest. The measure would also grant amnesty to those guilty of illegally deforesting the area prior to 2008 (such crimes are punishable by fines).
Last Friday, another rural leader, Adelino Ramos, was shot dead in the state of Rondonia. Widely known as Dinho, Ramos was shot by a motorist as he sold vegetables in Rondonia’s capital, Porto Velho.
A man named Ozeas Vicente was arrested Monday after turning himself in for killing Adelino Ramos.
After Monday’s meeting, ministers gave no details to explain how the government plans to increase policing in the rural Amazon states. The Brazilian Justice Ministry did however did ask for the federal police’s participation in investigating the death of the two activists in the state of Pará.
“We will not accept these murders, and will intensify monitoring and investigation and strengthen actions leading to sustainable development in the region,” said Rural Development Minister Afonso Florence, according to The Washington Post.
Just Published at the Latin America News Dispatch
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Headlines from the Western Hemisphere
North America
- The Mexican government honored a kindergarten teacher in northern Mexico who became an Internet sensation after a video showed her calmly leading children through a duck-and-cover drill as a shootout occurred outside.
- Lawmakers in California are taking steps to opt out of a controversial federal immigration enforcement program, claiming it harms public safety and undermines local law enforcement.
Caribbean
- Granma, the official daily of the Cuban Communist Party, exploded Monday against the country’s excess of bureaucratic meetings.
Central America
- Spain’s National Court issued an arrest warrant Monday for 20 Salvadoran military officials in connection with the slayings of six priests, their housekeeper and her daughter more than two decades ago.
- The British government is warning tourists about the increase in crime and number of missing people in Costa Rica, officials said.
Andes
- U.S. sanctions against Venezuela’s state oil company may benefit rather than hurt President Hugo Chávez’s government by providing fuel for anti-U.S. rhetoric as the leftist leader rallies supporters ahead of next year’s presidential elections.
- Soaring food prices are forcing many Venezuelans to change their eating habits, trim their shopping lists and set aside more of their earnings to feed their families.
- Ultranationalist Ollanta Humala, who rattled investors in Peru’s last presidential election, says he would tax the “windfall profits” of mining companies but not take them over if he wins the presidency in April.
- The stock markets of Chile, Peru and Colombia merged on Monday to become Latin America’s second-largest exchange, but trading was limited and faces tax hurdles coupled with political uncertainty in Peru.
Southern Cone
- President Dilma Rousseff visited Uruguay on Monday in an effort to ease growing concerns over the country’s “Brazil-dependency” and obstacles to bilateral trade.
- Argentina’s ruling coalition posted mixed results during the provincial elections held over the weekend and lost a tight race in the oil and gas rich province of Chubut.
- A man transporting around half a ton of marijuana died Monday when his pick-up truck flipped over during a police chase in Paraguay.
Image: CIAT International Center for Tropical Agriculture @ Flickr.
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