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release from Alert Against the Green Desert Movement. For more information www.cimi.org.br
In the early morning of 24 November, around 250 peasants, men and women,
inhabitants of the community of Vereda Funda, municipality of Rio Pardo de
Minas, North of the state of Minas Gerais, reoccupied an area of about
8,000 hectares planted with eucalyptus plantations, called Olhos d´água
and owned by the company Florestaminas. These lands always were so-called
devolutas lands. This means that these lands never were registered by the
local people, called geraizeiros, who have been occupying these lands for
centuries. In 1971, the Minas Gerais state government registered this land
and 'rent' it for 20 years to Florestaminas to plant eucalyptus for
charcoal production, expelling the local people, and leaving them without
their cerrado (sort of 'savannah') vegetation that was able to attend all
their basic needs: firewood, food, area for their small cattle, medicinal
plants, fruits, water, etc.
In 2001, instead of giving the lands back to
the local people, the state of Minas Gerais once again gave the right to
Florestaminas to continue planting eucalyptus. A continuous struggle of
the local communities towards the state institutions to give these lands
back to the people because they belong to them and because they need them
for their fysical and cultural survival was totally neglected by the state
institutions.
The proposal of the community of Vereda Funda is much more than
reoccupying their lands. The people developed a proposal to reconvert the
8,000 hectares of lands to the traditional cerrado vegetation, proposing
the implementation of a diversified system of food, wood and firewood
production, creating 400 direct jobs, income raising and recovery of the
water resources situation in the region, heavily affected by several
cycles of eucalyptus growing. The plan also includes permanent protections
areas. But the state showed little interest in their plans, presented to
them over the past few years. And instead of supporting the plan of the
community, that could strengthen heavily the local economy, the
authorities showed a total interest to continue investing in a monoculture
that creates very few jobs, produces charcoal for an iron industry that
benefits once again few people, and certainly not the local people that
suffer each day more from the plantations that surround and isolate them.
And also the fact that the community pilot projects of recovering the
traditional vegetation did not have success because the water resources
has dried up, the people saw no other alternative than reoccupying their
lands on their own.
The Alert against the Green Desert Movement and organizations linked with
the Via Campesina give their full support to this struggle of the 133
families of Vereda Funda. But the struggle is not only restricted to this
community. Nowadays, about 230,000 hectares of community and devolutas
lands in the Minas Gerais state are in the hands of eucalyptus plantation
companies that 'rent' these lands from the state government, mostly for
less than US$ 0,30 for each hectare/year.
What can be a result of the lack of willingness to carry out a real land
reform, became once again clear in what happened in the municipality of
Felizburgo, Minas Gerais, 6 days ago. Five landless workers of the
Movement of Landless Workers (MST) were killed by a group of armed
pistoleiros in a tents camp on a farm in the municipality of Felizburgo.
Since two years, the MST was occupying this farm and it is important to
declare that the lands of this farm are also devolutas what means that
they should never belong to big farmers. In the state of Minas Gerais,
there are around 11 million hectares of devolutas lands, including many
eucalyptus plantations.
ALERT AGAINST THE GREEN DESERT MOVEMENT/Brazil
26 November 2004
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