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I: RIGHTS-BRAZIL: Landless Leader Acquitted of Double Murder
- Subject: I: RIGHTS-BRAZIL: Landless Leader Acquitted of Double Murder
- From: "nello" <margiotta at tightrope.it>
- Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2000 16:11:11 +0200
-----Messaggio Originale----- Da: "IGC News Desk" <newsdesk at igc.apc.org> Newsgroup: misc.activism.progressive Data invio: domenica 9 aprile 2000 6.14 Oggetto: RIGHTS-BRAZIL: Landless Leader Acquitted of Double Murder Copyright 2000 InterPress Service, all rights reserved. Worldwide distribution via the APC networks. *** 06-Apr-0* *** Title: RIGHTS-BRAZIL: Landless Leader Acquitted of Double Murder By Mario Osava RIO DE JANEIRO, Apr 6 (IPS) - A Brazilian court cleared Jos‚ Rainha Junior, a leader of the agrarian reform Movimento dos Sem Terra (MST - Landless Movement), of charges that he was the ''intellectual author'' of a double assassination. The trial, at the end of its third day in Vitoria, capital of Espiritu Santo state on Brazil's central coast, concluded Thursday with a ruling of Rainha's innocence after his defence team proved that he was nearly 2,000 km from the scene of the crime when the murders took place June 5, 1989. Four defence witnesses testified that Rainha Junior was in Cear at the time, a state in the nation's northeast. In addition, the testimony of the principal prosecution witness included several contradictions which the defence used to its advantage. The jury's ruling, however, was divided as four members found Rainha innocent while three voted for a guilty verdict. In his first trial, in 1997, Rainha was sentenced to 26 years and six months in prison. But Brazilian law stipulates that the accused have the right to a new trial if the prison sentence exceeds 20 years. The first trial was held in Pedro Canario, a town in Espiritu Santo where the assassination of police officer Sergio Narciso da Silva and ranch-owner Jos‚ Machado Neto occurred during a dispute with local MST activists. In addition to the anti-MST climate in Pedro Canario, it was proved that several jury members were predisposed to condemn Rainha, and several were said to be friends of the murdered rancher. Justice authorities recognised the local ill will toward the accused and scheduled the new trial to take place in the state's capital, considered to be a more neutral location. Tension had been running high in Vitoria since the trial began Monday as some 3,000 MST activists and leftist politicians who support the movement rallied outside the courthouse. International rights activists were also present, including representatives from Amnesty International. Meanwhile, the two murder victims' family members and individuals who condemn the peasant movement, joined in demanding a guilty verdict for Rainha. MST leaders had threatened to radicalise their actions if the court ruled against Rainha. The honorary president of the Workers Party (PT), Luis Inacio Lula da Silva, and several parliamentarians were present to express their solidarity with Rainha and to demand that his name be cleared. Rainha's legal defence was in the hands of three attorneys, including Evandro Lins y Silva, 88, a legendary personality of Brazilian justice considered the best criminal lawyer in the country. In his statements, Lins y Silva went beyond outlining the evidence for Rainha's acquittal, and spoke about agrarian reform, social justice and globalisation. His performance drew many law students and attorneys to the courtroom. Raul Jungmann, minister of Agrarian Affairs, said in Brasilia that ''justice has been done,'' and applauded the calm in which the trail took place, in a nation he says ''is no longer dominated by the big landowners.'' But the violence sparked by land disputes is also the subject of other pending trials, such as that of the police charged with the 1996 massacre in northern Brazil at Eldorado de Caraj s that left 19 peasants dead. Following his acquittal, Rainha pointed to the Eldorado de Caraj s crime as he stressed that justice for the landless will only be won if those responsible for the rural massacres are punished and if ''agrarian reform, education for all, citizenship and dignity'' are achieved. MST, founded in 1985, put agrarian reform on the national agenda through its intense peasant mobilisations. Brazil has one of the world's worst land distribution ratios, as the wealthiest 20 percent of the population owns 90 percent of the land and the poorest 40 percent hold just one percent. Its members participate in occupations of rural property they consider to be non-productive and of government buildings linked to the agrarian question in order to pressure authorities to accelerate and expand the creation of rural settlements. The organisation also carries out frequent protest marches down the nation's highways, demonstrations in the cities and mass assemblies. It has organised tens of thousands of peasant families in camps set up on idle land or highways as they wait for the government to establish permanent settlements. Rainha, 39, made his name as a leader of the movement in the Pontal de Paranapanema region of Sao Paulo state, following the bloody conflicts between peasants and landowners in Espiritu Santo. In the 1990s, he led numerous ranch invasions, which turned him into one of MST's most-recognised leaders, and has escaped several arrest warrants. His wife, Diolinda Alves, has also become a symbol of peasant and women's struggles. She was twice sent to prison, separated from her children, as she continued to reaffirm her commitment to fighting for agrarian reform. (END/IPS/tra-so/mo/mj/ld/00) Origin: Montevideo/RIGHTS-BRAZIL/ ---- [c] 2000, InterPress Third World News Agency (IPS) All rights reserved May not be reproduced, reprinted or posted to any system or service outside of the APC networks, without specific permission from IPS. This limitation includes distribution via Usenet News, bulletin board systems, mailing lists, print media and broadcast. For information about cross- posting, send a message to <wdesk at ips.org>. For information about print or broadcast reproduction please contact the IPS coordinator at <online at ips.org>. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- This email server is running an evaluation copy of the MailShield anti- spam software. Please contact your email administrator if you have any questions about this message. MailShield product info: www.mailshield.com
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