Attacks and Death Threats Put Members of the Pastoral Land Commission in Brazil at Risk

BRICS, 25 Feb 2013

The Right Livelihood Award Foundation – TRANSCEND Media Service

The Pastoral Land Commission (CPT), which has for years campaigned tirelessly to advance social justice and the rights of small farmers and the landless in Brazil, suffered three attacks on its headquarters in the state of Acre this year. It is suspected that these attacks are reprisal attacks on CPT, which recently denounced irregularities in forest management and land ownership in the states of Acre and Amazonas. The Right Livelihood Award Foundation, which in 1991 recognised the work of the Pastoral Land Commission, condemns the attacks and demands increased security for rural workers. 

The Right Livelihood Award Foundation is deeply concerned that the CPT has been attacked seven times in the past two years and three times since January 2013. These attacks took place at the headquarters of the CPT in the state of Acre in western Brazil bordering Peru and Bolivia where the organisation had questioned the concentration of natural resources in the hands of few.

The Right Livelihood Award was bestowed jointly on CPT and the MST (Landless Workers’ Movement) in 1991 precisely because of their work on behalf of social justice and respect for the rights of small farmers and landless peasants in Brazil.

According to the National Committee of the CPT, burglars forced access into the CPT headquarters of Rio Branco, Acre, on the morning of January 21, and stole work items such as computers, printers, cameras and important institutional documentation. The police could not find any fingerprints to provide clues about the attackers. Another attack occurred at the same venue during the early hours of January 22. At that time the criminals only stole documents, including the police report from the day before. An identical attack occurred on January 30.

In addition to these break-ins and thefts, Marlene Braga Maria Martins, coordinator of CPT in the region, and Cosme Capistano da Silva, pastoral worker in the city of Boca do Acre, have both received death threats. The National Committee of the CPT considers that the threats are resulting from the organization’s work on land redistribution issues in conflict zones of Brazil. CPT has filed complaints in these cases to the relevant state and federal authorities.

According to a CPT report, 29 people were killed in Brazil during 2011 because of land related conflicts. A partial survey conducted in 2012 indicates that this trend is continuing.

Land conflict in Brazil is on the rise, as is the number of activists being threatened. For each new violent attack, the CPT attributes the same causes: economic interests, impunity, delay in court proceedings and inefficiency in land reform policy implementation.

The Executive Director of the Right Livelihood Award Foundation, Ole von Uexkull, reiterated his concern at the lack of protection given to rural workers in Brazil and called on state and federal governments to vigorously pursue investigations in the cases reported: “These recent attacks on CPT workers and offices, together with the recent murders of Brazilian MST activists Cícero Guedes and Regina dos Santos Pinho show that threats to rural workers need to be taken seriously and deserve our full attention.”

More information

Contacts:

Cristiane Passos
Assessoria de Comunicação
Pastoral Land Commission
Phone: +62 4008 6406/6412/6400
Email: comunicacao@cptnacional.org.br

Nayla Azzinnari
Press Office for Spanish speaking media
Right Livelihood Award Foundation
Mobile: +54 9 11 5460 9860
Phone: +54 3543 422 236
Email: nayla@rightlivelihood.org
Skype: nayla.az

Ole von Uexkull
Executive Director

Right Livelihood Award Foundation
Phone: + 46 8 70 20 339
Email: info@rightlivelihood.org

About the Award

 

Founded in 1980, the Right Livelihood Awards are presented annually in the Swedish Parliament and are often referred to as ‘Alternative Nobel Prizes’. They were introduced “to honour and support those offering practical and exemplary answers to the most urgent challenges facing us today”.

Jakob von Uexkull, a Swedish-German professional philatelist, sold his business to provide the original funding. Since then, individual donors have financed the Award.

There are 149 Right Livelihood Award Laureates from 62 countries.

This article originally appeared on Transcend Media Service (TMS) on 25 Feb 2013.

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