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Wave of Land Invasions Hits Sao Paulo
AP ^ | April 19, 2004 | ALAN CLENDENNING

Posted on 04/19/2004 4:18:29 PM PDT by Tailgunner Joe

SAO PAULO, Brazil (AP) - Riot police used tear gas Monday to eject hundreds of squatters who had seized a vacant building in Brazil's largest city to demand the government speed up redistribution of land to the poor.

Brazil's first elected leftist president, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, came to office 15 months ago with promises to redistribute property. But leaders of urban and rural squatter groups say his administration's efforts have fallen short.

Police arrested eight people and said three suffered minor injuries after police used tear gas to flush out the squatters who broke into a vacant building in Sao Paulo's center before dawn.

Hundreds more took over a large plot of vacant land on the city's outskirts and started setting up makeshift shacks, authorities said.

The Sao Paulo sit-in was the first urban protest this year after nearly a month of land seizures in rural areas by landless peasants.

Silva, speaking out about the protests for the first time, said Monday his government is trying to grant 130,000 titles to people squatting on unused land across the country.

Silva, the country's first working class president, said Brazil's landless are free to protest, but said the seizures could hurt the reform efforts that have been opposed by business groups, ranchers and centrist politicians.

``People should not lose their sense of responsibility,'' Silva said on his radio show. ``People should realize that acting radically does not help us.''

Land ownership among Brazil's rural and urban poor is one of the starkest signs of inequality in a country where more than 40 million people earn less than $1 a day.

About 90 percent of the land is owned by just 20 percent of the country's 178 million people. The poorest 40 percent of the population hold just 1 percent.

``These occupations wouldn't be necessary if the government did more to help us find places to live,'' said Roque Cuello, who is helping oversee the squatters setting up camp Monday on a vacant lot owned by Sao Paulo's state government

The urban property invasion attempts are the first since last July, when thousands of squatters took over four large, unused apartment buildings and a huge lot owned by Volkswagen in front of one of the carmaker's biggest Brazilian plants.

In the last month alone, the Landless Rural Workers Movement says it has moved nearly 100,000 people onto rural land it claims is not being used in attempts to gain title to the properties.

The highest concentration of rural seizures have been in the destitute northeastern state of Pernambuco, where Silva was born and grew up.


TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: brazil; mst

1 posted on 04/19/2004 4:18:33 PM PDT by Tailgunner Joe
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To: uburoi2000
Having visited Sao Paulo on business, I would never consider it a tourist destination. I would feel safer as a tourist with a Southern accent at 3:00 AM walking alone through the Bronx.
3 posted on 04/19/2004 6:15:23 PM PDT by NCjim
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To: wardaddy
This is really depressing.
4 posted on 04/19/2004 9:57:28 PM PDT by cyborg (The 9-11 commission members have penis envy.)
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To: Tailgunner Joe
About 90 percent of the land is owned by just 20 percent

That is hardly Oligarchy standards....probably not much different than here .

5 posted on 04/19/2004 10:05:33 PM PDT by wardaddy (This is it. We either win and prevail or we lose and get tossed into that dustbin W mentioned!)
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