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Indigenous leader assassinated in Brazil

By agency reporter
October 18, 2016

A Brazilian Indian leader at the forefront of his people’s struggle to reclaim their ancestral land has been assassinated.

João Natalício Xukuru-Kariri was reportedly stabbed to death outside his home. Reports suggest that two men killed João, but their identities have not been confirmed.

Seu João, as he was known, was heavily involved in the Xukuru-Kariri tribe’s campaign to live on their ancestral land, a right enshrined in Brazilian and international law.

Another Xukuru-Kariri leader told the Brazilian support group CIMI: “The region has a history of violence resulting from the land struggle. Seu João was a respected leader of our people.”

Land theft is the biggest problem the Xukuru-Kariri and other tribal peoples face, says Survival International, the global movement for tribal peoples' rights. Around the world, industrialised society is stealing tribal lands in the pursuit of profit. But for tribal peoples, land is life. It fulfills all their material and spiritual needs.

Brazil’s Congress is currently debating a proposal to drastically weaken indigenous peoples’ land rights, which, if implemented, would be catastrophic for tribes nationwide and would further worsen their plight.

The key to indigenous peoples’ prosperity is to ensure their land remains under their control. The Xukuru-Kariri, alongside dozens of other tribes and their allies, are calling for the proposal to be scrapped.

Survival’s global call against the proposal, PEC 215, has so far generated over 13,000 protest emails to Brazil’s Congress.

* More about PEC 215 here

* Survival International http://www.survivalinternational.org/

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