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- <text id=90TT3416>
- <title>
- Dec. 17, 1990: Justice Comes To The Amazon
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Dec. 17, 1990 The Sleep Gap
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ENVIRONMENT, Page 76
- Justice Comes to the Amazon
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>But convicting the alleged killers of Chico Mendes would not end
- the fight between ranchers and rubber tappers in the rain
- forest
- </p>
- <p>By Andrea Dorfman--Reported by John Maier Jr./Rio de Janeiro
- </p>
- <p> The little-known town in the remote western Amazon has just
- four dingy guesthouses and 450 phone lines and lies a rugged
- five-hour drive from the nearest major airport. And yet this
- week, normally tranquil Xapuri (pop. 6,000) is being invaded
- by 3,000 visitors from the surrounding territory and around the
- globe. They have come to witness a long-awaited event: the
- trial of two men accused of murdering Chico Mendes. In fact,
- everyone who cares about environmental issues is watching to
- see whether justice will prevail in the case of the humble
- rubber tapper whose defense of the Amazon rain forest made him
- a world-renowned martyr.
- </p>
- <p> But is the proceeding, as many of the local people claim,
- just a show for the international media? No, argues Brazilian
- Environment Secretary Jose Lutzenberger, who sees the trial as
- a clear demonstration that his country will protect the rain
- forest, along with the rubber tappers (seringueiros) and
- Indians who depend upon the trees for their livelihood. "Chico
- Mendes did not die in vain," he says. "We must and will put a
- stop to ecological crimes."
- </p>
- <p> For decades, ever widening patches of the Amazon have been
- burned or cut down by developers building towns, ranchers
- raising cattle, companies going after timber and settlers
- trying to grow crops. Mendes was among those forest dwellers
- who realized that their way of life was slowly being snuffed
- out. So in 1975, he organized a rural workers' union. To stop
- the deforestation, union members and their families formed
- human blockades around areas scheduled to be cleared. These
- Gandhiesque acts, called empates, helped save thousands of acres
- but also made Mendes unpopular with landowners and local
- officials.
- </p>
- <p> Two men accused of killing him--Darly Alves da Silva, 56,
- a wealthy Xapuri rancher, and his son Darci, 24--were the
- targets of one of Mendes' last empates, in March 1988. After
- the confrontation, Mendes, who had allegedly been threatened
- many times by the elder Da Silva, feared for his life and
- alerted the police. But on Dec. 22, 1988, Mendes was struck
- down by a single shotgun blast as he stepped out the back door
- of his home. His police bodyguards were inside playing
- dominoes. Mendes was 44.
- </p>
- <p> Though his accomplishments were virtually unknown outside
- the conservation community, the shot that killed him echoed
- around the world. His widow Ilzamar, now 25, was soon traveling
- to the U.S. and other countries to accept posthumous awards
- showered on Mendes by environmental groups. She sold the rights
- to his story for more than $1 million. Producer David Puttnam
- will make a movie; numerous books, TV documentaries and
- magazine articles are in the works.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, justice has moved relatively slowly in Xapuri.
- Though the Da Silvas were arrested within weeks of the murder,
- the case was delayed as the defense made a variety of motions
- and investigators questioned more than 50 people, accumulating
- some 2,200 pages of statements. Almost all those involved in
- the case--including the judge, Mendes family members,
- seringueiro leaders, the lawyers and the Da Silvas--have
- received death threats.
- </p>
- <p> Of the dozen people expected to testify during the trial,
- the key prosecution witness is 16-year-old Genesio Barbosa da
- Silva (no relation to the defendants), a former Da Silva ranch
- hand. He told police that he overheard the younger Da Silva
- plan and then boast of Mendes' murder. Several other people
- have said they heard both Da Silvas threaten Mendes and the
- seringueiros. And the son confessed to the shooting, although
- he later retracted the statement.
- </p>
- <p> Those familiar with the Mendes case, including the lawyers,
- believe the verdict is in. "I would be very surprised--shocked, is more like it--if the jury does not find them
- guilty," says Marcio Thomaz Bastos, the chief prosecutor.
- Defense lawyer Joao Lucena Leal considers acquittal so unlikely
- that he is preparing an appeal. "It is going to be impossible
- to have a fair trial," Leal says. "With the eyes of the world
- on Xapuri, what you are going to witness is two men who had
- nothing to do with the killing being sacrificed." If convicted,
- the Da Silvas could receive sentences of 12 to 30 years.
- </p>
- <p> That will not satisfy the seringueiros, who think Mendes'
- death was the product of a conspiracy that included some of the
- region's more powerful landowners and politicians. "Putting the
- Da Silvas in jail is not the solution," says Rosa Maria Roldan
- of the National Council of Rubber Tappers. "The only real way
- justice will be served is if the government gets to the roots
- of who was behind Chico's death." Roldan and others fear that
- once the trial is over and the spotlight gone, the violence
- against rubber tappers will resume.
- </p>
- <p> Whatever happens, Mendes' message did not go unheard. One
- of his aims was to create reserves in which rubber tappers and
- Indians could live off the land without destroying the forest.
- Earlier this year, Brazil created its first such refuge, named
- after Mendes, in the Jurua River valley near Xapuri. Since
- then, the government has established three more. In those areas
- at least, the people of the Amazon have a better chance to
- survive, thanks to Chico Mendes.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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