INDIANS REJOICE AS SUPREME COURT AFFIRMS LAND RIGHTS
Raposa-Serra do Sol Territory, Brazil:
Indians across Brazil are celebrating today as the majority of
judges in the Supreme Court ruled to uphold indigenous land rights
in a key case. Indian representatives have called the decision, made
yesterday on the 60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights, a ‘great victory’.

The ruling concerns the indigenous territory Raposa-Serra do Sol
(‘Land of the Fox and Mountain of the Sun’) in the Amazon state of
Roraima. A small group of powerful farmers, who want the Indians’
land and are supported by local politicians, had petitioned the
Supreme Court to overturn the Brazilian government’s legal
recognition of the territory. President Lula signed the territory
into law in 2005.
Yesterday eight out of eleven Supreme Court judges affirmed the
Indians’ rights to the land, saying it had been demarcated according
to the constitution. They affirmed the importance of maintaining
indigenous territories as single, continuous areas and stated that
territories on Brazil’s borders do not pose a risk to national
sovereignty.
The five tribes of Raposa-Serra do Sol had struggled for thirty
years to reclaim their ancestral land. The group of farmers refused
to leave the area when it was demarcated as an indigenous territory,
and since the demarcation they have been waging a campaign of
violence against the Indians in order to resist being removed from
the land.
Shocking footage taken in May this year shows gunmen hired by one of
the farmers attacking a Makuxi Indian community, throwing homemade
bombs and firing assault rifles. Ten Indians were wounded in the
attack.
The judges also ruled that the farmers must leave Raposa-Serra do
Sol, but did not specify when. This will be decided when the ruling
is concluded during the court’s next session starting in February
2009, when the remaining three judges deliver their rulings.


Makuxi leader Jacir José de Souza of the Indigenous Council of
Roraima (CIR) said today, ‘The land is our mother. We are happy that
[our land] has been reclaimed and that the Supreme Court has
vindicated indigenous people.’
The Indians of Raposa-Serra do Sol believe that the loss of their
land would have destroyed their way of life. Indians elsewhere in
Brazil also feared that if the Supreme Court had overturned the
demarcation of the territory, it would have left their lands open to
similar legal challenges.
Survival’s director Stephen Corry said today, ‘This is fantastic
news for the people of Raposa-Serra do Sol. The Brazilian government
must now make sure that the farmers leave the area and that the
campaign of terror against the Indians ends. It must also ensure
that Indian land rights are upheld nationwide, so that never again
will we see such blatant attacks on Indians on their own land."
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