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Indigenous chief shot in head in Brazil’s ‘palm oil war’ region; crisis group launched

Lúcio Tembé, chief of the Turé-Mariquita village in Tomé-Açu, northeastern Pará.

Lúcio Tembé, chief of the Turé-Mariquita village in Tomé-Açu, northeastern Pará.

  • On May 14, Indigenous chief Lúcio Tembé was shot by gunmen on an unpaved road in Brazil’s northern Pará state. This is the latest episode of violence in an area facing an outbreak of land conflicts between a major palm oil company and local communities, the so-called “palm oil war.”
  • The Federal Public Ministry raised the possibility of the crime’s connection to conflicts with palm oil companies in the region and requested urgent measures of the Federal Police and Pará’s State Department of Public Security and Social Defense (Segup) in view of the intense level of conflict in the region “with concrete risks to the Indigenous peoples’ life and physical integrity.”
  • A crisis committee to contain escalating conflicts in the region was announced on May 16; the crime is being investigated by the Federal Police and the Quatro Bocas municipal police station, urging that any relevant information be forwarded via the hotline 181 under guaranteed confidentiality.
  • Some readers may find the images below disturbing, discretion is advised.

This story was supported by the Pulitzer Center’s Rainforest Investigations Network where Karla Mendes is a fellow.

 

A prominent Indigenous leader was shot in the head on May 14 in the Brazilian Amazon, intensifying the cry for justice in a dubbed “palm oil war” region where violence against land activists keeps systematically soaring without punishment, and prompting the launch of a crisis committee to investigate the crime.

In the early hours of Sunday, Indigenous chief Lúcio Tembé was shot by two gunmen when he and another Indigenous man were trying to dig out a car that was stuck in the mud of an unpaved road on their way back from the town of Quatro Bocas to the Turé-Mariquita Indigenous Territory, in northern Pará state, Indigenous leaders say.

Lúcio Tembé’s niece, Queila Tembé, related to Mongabay the details of the crime that the Indigenous person accompanying her uncle shared with the Tembé people. “At that moment when he [Lúcio Tembé] was standing still, these two hooded thugs arrived, shone a flashlight on him and shot him in the head,” she said in an audio message. “Then the Indigenous accompanying him jumped out in front of him to try to save him. You can imagine that they [the thugs] thought that since they hit him on the head, that he was dead. So they got on their motorcycles and headed toward the village.”

She said she knew about the crime through phone calls from relatives and they went together to the reported place, where they confirmed it was true. “I felt very sad, and at the same time, outraged about what had happened. The family’s reaction is one of great revolt.” Lúcio Tembé was put in an intensive care unit, she added, in the metropolitan region of Pará’s capital, Belém, and his health situation was stable as he awaited surgery scheduled for May 20.

“He is taking medication to reduce the swelling of his face, [because] he fractured his jaw and burst his eardrums on the right side,” Indigenous leader Miriam Tembé, Lúcio Tembé’s cousin, told Mongabay in a text message, urging for justice to put an end to impunity in the region. “We are anguished and we ask for help, we ask that justice gives us an answer because there is so much impunity, violence is happening, attacks against us, and nothing is being done.”

“Our feeling is of revolt and injustice, we see no support from the state and competent bodies in our favor,” said the leader, who is the head of the Acará Valley’s Tembé Indigenous Association. “So much violence against us traditional peoples and justice does not act. Will more lives have to be lost for something to be done?”

According to Queila Tembé, Lúcio Tembé’s surgery on May 20 went well; he returned to the Turé-Mariquita Territory on May 22, as posted on social media by his family.

Lúcio Tembé
Lúcio Tembé, chief of the Turé-Mariquita village in Tomé-Açu, northeastern Pará, was shot in the head by two gunmen in the early hours of May 14. Image courtesy of Paratê Tembé.

In an emailed statement, the Federal Police said it opened an inquiry to investigate the crime, and a team has already been sent to the site to make an initial survey, complying with a request from the Federal Public Ministry (MPF). MPF called an emergency meeting with several authorities in Pará for May 15; the creation of a crisis committee to contain escalating conflicts in the region was announced on May 16.

This is the latest episode of violence in an area facing an outbreak of land conflicts between a major palm oil company and local communities, the so-called “palm oil war,” as reported on by Mongabay since October.

In the past three years, Mongabay has published investigative stories revealing land-grabbing accusations, violencewater contamination and other environmental crimes attributed to palm oil companies in Pará.

Specifically in the Turé-Mariquita region, Mongabay published in 2021 an in-depth 18-month investigation revealing evidence of water contamination from pesticide use by palm oil company Biopalma — now Brasil BioFuels S.A. (BBF) —  that has impacted not just the Tembé people of Turé-Mariquita but also other Indigenous lands, Afro-Brazilian Quilombola communities, ribeirinhos (traditional riverside communities) and small farmers. The investigation also unveiled other issues triggered by oil palm crops in the region: soil pollution, deforestation, scarcity of fish and game, along with health issues and social and land conflicts.

Lúcio Tembé was our local guide and a key source to the investigation.  “The oil palm only brought a lot of problems. First of all, it brought destruction of our fauna, our flora, our rivers,” he said in the 2019 interview as he looked out over the Turé River. “This water isn’t clean. But in the past, we drank it. This river and the forest around it were like a supermarket for the population; it was where we fished, where we hunted.”

The chief told us the Tembé people were not properly consulted before Biopalma’s oil palm venture got up and running. “We were not listened to for this project; when we saw it, the project was already established around our territory.”

During Mongabay field reporting in the region in late 2019, the reporting team barely evaded a high-speed robbery when they were pursued by men on two motorbikes on the same path where Lúcio Tembé was shot May 14 while returning from Turé-Mariquita to Tomé-Açu at night.

The investigation helped federal prosecutors obtain a court decision to scrutinize the environmental impacts of pesticide use by BBF in oil palm plantations on Indigenous communities and the environment in the state. This investigation won second prize in the Society of Environmental Journalists Awards for Outstanding Investigative Reporting and third prize in the Fetisov Awards for Excellence in Environmental Reporting.

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Palm oil-linked conflicts

Conflicts between local communities and palm oil firms in the Tomé-Açu region go back a decade. November 2015 saw the first major mobilization of Indigenous people, Quilombolas, traditional riverside dwellers and residents of neighboring communities against palm oil firms. About 140 people came together and occupied Biopalma’s Vera Cruz headquarters, paralyzing the company for 11 days. Lúcio Tembé was one of the leaders of the occupation. One Quilombola leader was jailed for eight months; the Indigenous chief was also arrested.

However, violence escalated in the region following Biopalma’s sale to BBF in 2020, community leaders and authorities say, as previous agreements between Biopalma and the communities have reportedly not been honored under the new ownership. There are also land disputes over areas claimed by both sides.

But it has grown even worse since September 2022, with escalating violence triggered by land disputes between BBF on one side and Indigenous and traditional communities on the other. While communities argue that BBF unduly occupied their ancestral lands and accuse the company of using its security guides for violent attacks against the communities, the company denies the accusations, saying it’s the local communities that attacked its employees instead. As a result, BBF filed more than 750 police reports since 2021 against them for “robbery, theft, arson, attempted rape, aggression against workers, attempted murder, firearm shooting, among others,” the company said in a statement to Mongabay in late April related to a conflict with Quilombolas.

As previously reported by Mongabay, the MPF is investigating the action of armed militias and private security companies in the region and possible crimes and irregularities by these companies.

Oil palm plantations - aerial image.
Oil palm plantations in Tome-Açu municipality, northeastern Pará, 2009. Image by Eric Stoner/USAID Biodiversity & Forestry via Flickr (CC BY-NC 2.0).

In a May 14 news release, the MPF said “it is possible that this is another episode of violence that the Tembé Indigenous people of Tomé-Açu are suffering because of conflict with palm oil companies in the region, which requires the actions of federal agencies, considering that the dispute involves collective rights of Indigenous peoples.”

In an emailed statement, BBF denied all accusations of any involvement in the attack against Lúcio Tembé, calling the MPF’s claims connecting the increased violence in the area to Biopalma’s arrival of “a clear strategy of illation, with the objective of taking the focus off the investigations and harming the company,” adding that the “frivolous accusations” were made “without proof and/or justification of the company’s involvement against traditional peoples of the State of Pará.”

The MPF said it requested urgent measures to the Federal Police and Pará’s State Department of Public Security and Social Defense (Segup) in order to clarify the attempted murder of an Indigenous leader.”The Federal Police authority is requested to give urgency and priority to the fulfillment of current and future investigative measures in the police investigation in question, in view of the intense level of conflict in the northeastern region of Pará, with concrete risks to the Indigenous people’s life and physical integrity,” federal prosecutor Felipe de Moura Palha, chief of the MPF unit in Pará, wrote in the request.

In an emailed statement, Segup said Civil Police and Military Police teams worked on Lúcio Tembé’s case adding that it is being investigated by the Quatro Bocas police station. “At the moment, investigations are being carried out in order to collect all traces and evidence that can contribute to the elucidation of the crime and the identification of those responsible,” the statement said, urging that any information that could help the investigations be forwarded via the hotline 181 under guaranteed confidentiality.

In an emailed statement on May 22, Segup said the Civil Police arrested Juscelino Ramos Dias, known as “Passarinho” (little bird in English translation) as the main suspect in the attempted murder of Lúcio Tembé. The arrest of the suspect, it added, was converted by the judiciary into preventive custody and the case is being investigated by Quatro Bocas police station through an inquiry. The Civil Police general chief Walter Rezende said in a news release the possible motive of the crime was “the sale of illicit substances on Indigenous lands, which was not accepted by Lúcio Tembé.”

BBF added that the details of the handling of this case disclosed by Rezende in a press conference “corroborates the context of the situation that the company has been alerting and notifying the public authorities about for more than two years: Tomé Açu and Acará are dominated by crime, indigenous invaders and organized crime.” According to the company, “The invaded areas have become points for drug trafficking,” adding that “workers and residents are victims of this web of crime, which steals palm fruits to sell them to receiving companies that operate illegally in the region.”

Indigenous leaders Uhu Tembé and Lúcio Tembé alongside tractors seized from palm oil company Biopalma. The machinery was used to knock down oil palm trees a few meters from the Yriwar Indigenous Village, in the Tembé Indigenous Reserve, in Pará, on November 11, 2019. Photo: Karla Mendes/Mongabay

‘That’s enough’

“For the MPF, that’s enough,” Palha, the chief prosecutor in Pará, said in the meeting, according to a May 16 news release. “This is yet another sad episode of serious human rights violations in the Amazon. Every process of implementing large projects needs to be reviewed and take into consideration the rights of traditional communities that are vilified on a daily basis.” Regarding the attempted murder of the Tembé chief, Palha said, “It is still too early to point to the culprits” but the MPF “will closely monitor the investigations.”

In a video manifesto, Indigenous leader Paratê Tembé, Lúcio Tembé’s son, said very emotionally: “We only ask for justice so that this does not continue to happen, both in our region and throughout Brazil, the massacre of the Indigenous people. We ask for state intervention for the life of our people.”

“We want to protect the forest and save our lives. Save the lives of our warriors, our leaders, our caciques, our children, who are at risk,” he said in a May 15 video, adding that “there is no standing tree if we are not alive” and “we want to save our lives too.”

Paratê Tembé recalled decades of assassinations of Indigenous, Quilombola and riverbank leaders without anyone being arrested. “We denounce it to everyone and nobody does anything. They are only sensitive when there is an assassination attempt or someone dies.”

Recalling the details of the crime, he said his father survived “by some miracle.” “We are praying and we continue praying that he survives the surgery. Tupã [the supreme god in Indigenous Tupi language] will help us. We didn’t even have time to cry,” he said in tears. “We need, we need protection.”

Update (May 24, 2023): This article was updated to include BBF’s response and update information about Lúcio Tembé’s health condition and about the investigations of the crime.

Banner image: Lúcio Tembé, chief of the Turé-Mariquita village in Tomé-Açu, northeastern Pará. Image courtesy of Paratê Tembé.

Karla Mendes s a staff investigative and feature reporter for Mongabay in Brazil and a fellow of the Pulitzer Center’s Rainforest Investigations Network. Read her stories published on Mongabay hereFind her on Twitter, Instagram and LinkedIn.  

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Related listening: Hear Mongabay’s reporter for this story, Karla Mendes, discuss these issues with researcher Sandra Damiani and federal prosecutor Felício Pontes Júnior on Mongabay’s podcast, listen here:



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