Brazil: Bolsonaro Attacks MST and They Respond: “You Should Worry About the Pandemic”

By Igor Carvalho on April 16, 2021

After Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro posted a video on his social networks accusing the Landless Workers Movement (MST) of violence against landowners in southern Bahia, last Wednesday, April 14th, the movement of landless farmers responded.

“The Landless Rural Workers Movement in the state of Bahia emphasizes that it has no involvement in the case and hopes that the investigations find those responsible.” Instead they called on Bolsonaro to focus on the problems of the country in order to contain the rapid spread of the coronavirus.

“In this sense, we emphasize that the current government should worry about the rapid advance of the coronavirus pandemic, which has claimed the lives of 360,000 people here and has infected 14 million Brazilians, taking away their jobs and throwing thousands of families into poverty and bankruptcy and closing hundreds of micro, small and medium businesses, instead of attacking the MST without evidence, during the week that the Eldorado do Carajás Massacre commemorates its 25th anniversary.”

In the video released by Bolsonaro, a woman claims to have been assaulted by members of the MST in the Fábio Henrique camp, in the municipality of Prado, in southern Bahia.  It was in this city that in September 2020, the federal government sent the National Forces to accompany officials of the National Institute of Colonization and Agrarian Reform (Incra) inside the movement’s areas.

Days later, the Federal Supreme Court (STF) requested the withdrawal of troops from the municipality, since there was no endorsement from the Bahia government for the operation.  The movement considered the sending of agents as political and a disproportionate measure taken by the government.

Lucinéia Durães of the MST leadership in Bahia, commented on the president’s accusation.  “We in Fábio Henrique camp repudiate the lies that Bolsonaro’s government has used to attack us.”  She also said that the government needs to address the poverty that is spreading throughout the country.

“The struggle for Agrarian Reform will continue because we have 19 million people who know the bitter taste of hunger.  We are not responsible for the violence that incites hatred and lies but federal government is responsible for not allocating funds for Agrarian Reform.”

Source: Brazil de Fato, translation Resumen Latinoamericano – English