MAC: Mines and Communities

Brazilian judge sides with tribe threatened by dams

Published by MAC on 2014-11-10
Source: Environmental News Service, Mongabay.com

"Without formal recognition, this indigenous territory is vulnerable to dam building, illegal land-grabs, mining and logging."

Brazilian Judge Sides With Tribe Over Land Threatened by Dams

Environmental News Service (ENS)

6 November 2014

BRASILIA, Brazil – In a struggle between a Brazilian indigenous tribe and the federal government over two dams that would flood lands claimed by the tribe, a federal judge has ruled that the government must immediately publish its report delineating the tribe’s territory that has been withheld for more than a year.

Last week, in response to a lawsuit filed by the Federal Public Prosecutors’ Office, federal judge Rafael Leite Paulo issued a ruling that requires FUNAI, the federal agency responsible for indigenous people, to publish its report within 15 days and determine the final decision on demarcation of the Sawre Muybu territory.

In October 2013, after completing 12 years of field studies, FUNAI completed a technical report confirming the status of Sawre Muybu as the Munduruku people’s traditional indigenous territory.

But under pressure from the administration of Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff, FUNAI and the Ministry of Justice have refused to officially publish the report, stalling demarcation.

The court ruled, “The process is stopped without a valid basis, but only by invoking a generic and empty claim prioritization of the regions Center-South, Southeast and Northeast, and so, the rights of indigenous peoples would be perpetually postponed…”

Without formal recognition, this indigenous territory is vulnerable to dam building, illegal land-grabs, mining and logging.

Satellite imagery in studies done by FUNAI demonstrate the existence of several clandestine clearings opened by loggers for illegal deforestation within the indigenous territory, reports the federal government news service Agencia Brasil.

Tired of waiting, the Munduruku people are now demarcating their own territory.

In a statement issued Monday by Munduruku leaders, the decision to auto-demarcate their territory is a response to the Rousseff administration’s negligence in recognizing their land rights, as well as the government’s determination to construct two megadams.

Now in its second week, the “auto-demarcation” of the 178,000-hectare Sawré Muybu indigenous territory is a direct challenge to the federal government’s refusal to comply with legal obligations to demarcate Munduruku lands that would be impacted by the São Luiz do Tapajós and Jatobá dams, slated for construction on the Tapajós River.

For years, the Munduruku have protested the federal government’s repeated attempts to proceed with licensing and construction of the Tapajós dams, in disregard of their right to a process of free, prior and informed consultation and consent, as mandated by the Brazilian Constitution and international human rights agreements to which Brazil is a signatory.

“The government does not want to demarcate [Sawré Muybu] because it will obstruct the hydroelectric dams that they want to build on our river,” the Munduruku stated Monday. “Since the government won’t assume its responsibility, we determined to do it ourselves.”

The Tapajós River, one of the largest tributaries of the Amazon River, runs through the Amazon rainforest, mostly in Pará State. About 325 fish species are known to inhabit the Tapajós River basin, including 65 species found nowhere else. Many of these have only been discovered within the last decade, and some may be threatened by the dams that are planned on the river.

“The Munduruku have affirmed that they will only leave the Tapajós dead,” said Haroldo Espírito Santo of the Indigenist Missionary Council, CIMI. “They’ve clearly stated that any project that is not attuned to nature will be rejected by their people. They are part of this environment,” said Espirito Santo. “Their auto-demarcation is a way of affirming this fact to the government.”

Since early 2012, the Munduruku have fought the federal government’s efforts to conduct technical studies for dam projects within Sawre Muybu and other traditional lands. They have denied technicians access to their territories and detained technicians found on their lands.

In late June 2013, for instance, about 25 researchers were removed by the Munduruku from their indigenous lands. The technicians were collecting samples of plants and animals for environmental and feasibility studies for the hydroelectric plants planned on the Tapajós River.

According to the indigenous people, the researchers wore company uniforms of Concremat, which provides services to the Consortium study group Tapajós, led by companies Camargo Correia, GDF Suez, Eletrobrás and Eletronorte, among others, reports Agencia Brasil.

“What we did was a political action of resistance. We knew there were researchers in the region for at least two months. We went after them and brought them to the city. That’s what happened,” explains Ryan Munduruku, who participated in the operation.

On November 7, 2012, tensions flared when the Federal Police killed a young Mundukuru leader during a surprise action allegedly aimed at eliminating wildcat mining, but understood by the Munduruku as an act of intimidation, aimed at quashing indigenous opposition to dams on the Tapajós River.

President Rousseff has responded by sending police and military forces to serve as security for teams conducting technical studies for dam construction.

“Be it through neglect or brute force, the Brazilian government aims to crush the Munduruku’s resistance to their plans,” said Christian Poirier of the U.S.-based nonprofit Amazon Watch. “Yet the Munduruku refuse to be defeated. Their steadfast opposition represents the most serious challenge to the Brazilian government’s reckless Amazon dam-building program.”

As part of the Brazilian Energy Expansion Plan, 40 large dams on the main rivers and 52 small and micro dams are being planned in the Tapajós River Basin.


Brazilian tribes demarcate territory in bid to block dams

Mongabay.com

6 November 2014

Indigenous communities in Brazil have taken the unusual step of demarcating their own land — without the approval of the Brazilian government — in a bid to block two dams they say threaten their territory and traditional livelihoods, report International Rivers and Amazon Watch, advocacy groups that are fighting the projects.

Last week the Munduruku people annexed the 178,000-hectare Sawré Muybu territory after authorities failed to recognize their claims despite a report from FUNAI, Brazil’s indigenous affairs agency, confirming the status of the land as traditional indigenous territory.

“Under intense pressure from the Rousseff administration, FUNAI and the Ministry of Justice have refused to officially publish the report, stalling demarcation,” said the non-profits in a statement. “Lacking formal recognition, this indigenous territory remains highly vulnerable to dam building, illegal land-grabs, mining and logging.”

A judge has since given FUNAI 15 days to release the report.

At the center of the controversy is a plan to build two dams on the Tapajós River. The Brazilian government aims to build several dams in the Tapajós watershed, which is has some of the Amazon’s least-tamed rivers.

Environmentalists and indigenous leaders say the two dams in question, the São Luiz do Tapajós and Jatobá, would cause significant damage to the Tapajós, including flooding forest areas, disrupting fish migrations, and facilitating deforestation.

The Munduruku are demanding that the Brazilian government recognize their rights before proceeding any further on the dams.

“The government does not want to demarcate [Sawré Muybu] because it will obstruct the hydroelectric dams that they want to build on our river,” said the Munduruku via a statement translated by International Rivers and Amazon Watch. “Since the government won’t assume its responsibility, we determined to do it ourselves.”

Brazil is in the midst of a dam building spree across the Amazon basin, with hundreds of projects either under or planned domestically and in Bolivia, Peru, and Ecuador. Ecologists warn that the location and extent of dams could disrupt fish migration and nutrient flows across the massive watershed, with potential knock-on effects for Earth’s largest rainforest.

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