Source: Survival International
A violent gang of gunmen who have been terrorizing a community of Brazilian
Indians since they returned to their ancestral land has been caught on video.
The gang is believed to be employed by the rancher occupying the Guarani
Indians’ land, which was seized from them in the 1970s, and cleared for
ranching.
Last Monday one of the members of the community of Pyelito Kuê managed to
film the gunmen driving past their village and firing shots at them in broad
daylight.
Watch
the video here.
Last month the Guarani
of Pyelito Kuê returned to a small
part of their ancestral land, forcing out the rancher who had taken over
their land and blockaded their houses. But since they reoccupied their land,
gunmen have continued to threaten them, surrounding the Indians, firing shots,
and preventing medical workers from visiting. In the latest attack, one woman
was injured and many others were forced to flee.
The Brazilian police recently closed
down Gaspem, a notorious security firm accused of killing at least two
Guarani leaders, and brutally attacking hundreds more. Many similar companies
providing ‘security’ services to ranchers remain active, and politicians of
Brazil’s powerful anti-indigenous farming lobby have been encouraging
ranchers to evict Indians from their lands.
The Guarani said, ‘Do we need to decide to defend ourselves more forcefully?
Do we need to kill or to die to make people notice, respect and guarantee our
rights? We can’t take all this suffering any more.’
Nixiwaka Yawanawá,
a Yawanawá Indian from Brazil, said, ‘It is shocking to see the risks that my
brothers the Guarani are facing every day. They have the right to live on their
land in peace. We need everyone’s support to stop these ranchers and to pressure
the government to finally protect the Guarani’s land.
Thousands of Indians across Brazil have protested against a proposed
constitutional amendment that would give Brazil’s Congress – heavily influenced
by the anti-indigenous farming lobby – a say in the demarcation of indigenous
lands. Brazilian NGOs, including indigenous organizations, published
a letter last week calling on the government not to alter the demarcation
system and to concentrate on mapping out and protecting indigenous land as
required under the constitution.
Survival
International’s Director Stephen Corry said today, ‘This video gives a brief
glimpse of what the Guarani endure month after month – harassment, intimidation,
and sometimes murder, just for trying to live in peace on tiny fractions of the
ancestral land that was once stolen from them. Is it too much to expect the
Brazilian authorities, given the billions they’re spending on the World Cup, to
sort this problem out once and for all, rather than let the Indians’ misery
continue?’