A man of the Kayabi people. Thanks to a wise and sensible Judge, his way of life has been preserved.
"While the federal government stalls in implementing laws that
protect the rights of indigenous peoples, it is pressuring us to accept the
dams. But we know the compensation they are offering will never substitute
places that are sacred to us, such as Sete Quedas, that hold the cemeteries of
our ancestors and that should be preserved. Sete Quedas is also the spawning grounds of fish that are an
important source of food. They talk about fish ladders, but where have these
ever worked?” he asked.
A federal judge has suspended the
construction license of the Teles Pires hydroelectric dam in the Brazilian
Amazon, saying the permitting process violated the rights of indigenous people
protected under the Brazilian Constitution.
In her ruling, Judge Celia Regina Ody
Bernardes, a federal judge in the state of Mato Grosso, sided with federal
public prosecutors and public prosecutors from Mato Grosso and the state of
Pará who argued the dam would cause “imminent and irreversible damage to the
quality of life and cultural heritage of indigenous peoples of the region.”
The dam would flooding a series of
rapids on the Teles Pires River known as Sete Quedas, or Seven Waterfalls, the
spawning grounds of fish of great importance to the indigenous residents.
The judge ordered the immediate
suspension of all activities in dam construction, “especially explosions of
boulders in the region of Sete Quedas.”
A recent declaration by indigenous
peoples cited in the lawsuit states, “Sete Quedas is a sacred place, where the
Mae dos Peixes (Mother of Fish) and other spirits of our ancestors live ~ a
place known as Uel, meaning that it should not be messed with.”
The 1,820 megawatt capacity dam has
been under construction since August 2011 on the Teles Pires River, a major
tributary of the Tapajos River in the heart of the Brazilian Amazon.
The dam is one of six large hydropower
projects planned for the Teles Pires River, which forms the border between the
states of Mato Grosso and Pará.
In her decision, Judge Bernardes
concluded that prior to greenlighting dam construction, the federal
environmental agency IBAMA failed to consult with affected indigenous
communities, despite serious threats to their “socioeconomic and cultural
well-being.”
She ruled that this constitutes a
violation of the Brazilian Constitution and ILO Convention 169, which Brazil
signed in 2004.
In addition to its importance for the
physical survival of indigenous peoples, Sete Quedas holds tremendous cultural
significance. The lawsuit argues that the dam construction site is “a sacred
area relevant for the beliefs, customs, traditions, symbolism and spirituality
of indigenous peoples. As a cultural heritage site, it is protected by the
Brazilian Constitution and international agreements.”
Other threats to indigenous peoples
provoked by dam construction, cited in the lawsuit, include conflicts
associated with a massive influx of migrants to the region, land speculation,
illegal deforestation, predatory fishing and illegal exploitation of mining
resources. The prosecutors argued that, given a delay of almost 20 years in the
demarcation of the Kayabi territory, such threats are even more severe.
Taravy Kayabi, a leader of the Kayabi
people, said, “While the federal government stalls in implementing laws that
protect the rights of indigenous peoples, it is pressuring us to accept the
dams. But we know the compensation they are offering will never substitute
places that are sacred to us, such as Sete Quedas, that hold the cemeteries of
our ancestors and that should be preserved.”
“Sete Quedas is also the spawning
grounds of fish that are an important source of food. They talk about fish
ladders, but where have these ever worked? Kayabi asked.
“The government needs to look for
alternative ways to generate energy that don’t harm indigenous peoples and
their territories,” he said.
Civil society groups and leaders of the
Kayabi community welcomed the news of the the suspension of dam construction,
but warned against a possible overturning of Judge Bernardes’ restraining
order.
Brent Millikan, director of the Amazon
Program at International Rivers, based in California, says he has seen it
happen before.
“What we’ve seen over and over again,
in cases such as Belo Monte, is that the President’s office politically
intervenes in regional federal courts to overturn decisions against violations
of human rights and environmental legislation, using false arguments, such as
an impending blackout at the national level if dams aren’t immediately
constructed,” he said.
“Of course, this is ludicrous,” said
Millikan. He says indigenous peoples and human rights groups in Brazil and
around the world” are calling on the government of President Dilma Rousseff “to
change course and respect the country’s constitution and rule of law.”
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