Actress Regina Duarte leads cattle rancher against indigenous peoples
This actress needs to be boycotted worldwide
Since she married cattle rancher and entrepreneur Eduardo Lippincott, global actress Regina Duarte has been leading the livestock sector against indigenous peoples, participating in rallies against demarcations and against indigenous peoples throughout Brazil. In MS she is the "Propaganda Girl" in campaigns against indigenous people.
Global actress and cattle ranch Regina Duarte, speaking at the opening of the 45th Expoagro in 2009 in Dourados (MS), said she is in solidarity with producers and rural leaders on the issue of demarcation of indigenous lands and quilombolas in the state. The information is from the blog União Campo, Cidade e Floresta de 2012, with updated data.
Guarani and Kaiowá are being continually attacked by the ruralists, who have their voice over the global actress, who sells cattle and uses her image to fight the Indians.
"I confess that in Dourados I was afraid again," said the actress on Sunday (18), referring to the forecast of creating new reserves in the region of Dourados. "The right to property is inalienable," she explained, in a short, thick and wonderfully elucidative way, which makes BRAZIL a Brazilian. In fact, she must have been feeling scared since the 2002 presidential campaign ...
(Deputy Ronaldo Caiado, the main defender of these principles, should collect royalties from Regina Duarte ... Inalienables should be the right to life and dignity, but land is worth more than that here.)
"They can count on me, just as I was present at the most important moments of Brazilian politics." She and her husband are Brahman breeders in Barretos (SP).
Regina Duarte is the owner of Fazenda Minha Santa, in Barretos, 450 kilometers from the city of São Paulo, about 12 years ago, according to the Isto É magazine, with up-to-date data.
In the municipalities of the southern region and especially in the Southern Cone of the State, in Mato Grosso do Sul, on the border between Brazil and Paraguay, indigenous peoples claim the right for land currently occupied by farmers.
Clashes have happened with a balance of dead and injured Indians. One of the disputed lands, denominated Arroio-Korá is located in the municipality of Paranhos.
The Indigenous Land Identification Report, made by the anthropologist Levi Marques Pereira and published by the National Foundation of the Indian (Funai), testifies in documentary and bibliographical sources the presence of the Guarani in the region since the 18th century.
In 1767, with the installation of the Iguatemi Fort, the Indians began to have contact with the "whites", who gradually began to inhabit the region with the aim of keeping it under the custody of the Portuguese court. Beginning in 1940, ranchers occupied the area and began to pressure the Indians to leave their traditional lands.
The first owners acquired the lands next to the Government of, then, State of Mato Grosso and, little by little, expelled the Indians, common practice at that time. However, the natives of Arroio-Korá remained in the soil of their ancestors, working like pawns in farms.
Report of Identification and Delimitation of the Indigenous Land was published in 2004 and the demarcation approved by the Presidency of the Republic in 2009 (Decree nº 12.367). However, soon after the homologation, an order of security filed by rural owners suspended the effects of the presidential decree.
Currently, the Guarani-Kaiowá and Guarani-ñhandeva Indians of Arroio-Korá live in precarious and improvised situations in canvas shacks along roadsides and in indigenous reserves of the Southern Cone of Mato Grosso do Sul. It is estimated that 100 families are native Of region.
On Wednesday, Minister of Justice Jose Eduardo Cardozo reached an agreement with indigenous leaders that guarantees the land ownership to the Indians and provides compensation for local farmers, despite the resistance of many to leave their farms. However, there is no deadline for the agreement to become reality and for the National Security Force troops to leave.
Semião Vilhalva belonged to the Guarani-Kaiowá ethnicity, a group that gained public attention in 2012. That year, indigenous people from another Guarani-Kaiowá community issued a declaration of "collective death" of 170 men, women and children after receiving a eviction decreed by the Justice of Naviraí (MS).
The injunction was quickly suspended by the Federal Court and the public commotion in favor of this traditional Brazilian population dispersed. However, other problems of the Guarani-Kaiowá - who lived in Mato Grosso do Sul until they were expelled from their lands in the 1940s and 1950s - have remained unanswered for years.
In the municipality of Antônio João, the Guarani-Kaiowá had the homologation of their lands in 2005, but still do not have the right to enjoy their traditional area. With a land dispute proceeding in federal court since 2005, hundreds of Indians were confined to less than 150 hectares, out of the 9,317 that were approved. The remainder of the area was divided into nine farms,
source https://www.portaldenoticias.net/
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