By: Brent Millikan, Latin America Program Director
In response to the brutal assassination of Dilma Ferreira Silva, a leader of Brazil’s Movement of Dam-Affected Peoples (MAB) in the area impacted by the notorious Tucuruí hydroelectric dam, a joint statement drafted by International Rivers and AIDA, and co-signed by over 100 human rights and environmental organizations from 25 countries, was sent today to Brazilian authorities and multilateral bodies, including the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) and the InterAmerican Commission on Human Rights (IACHR).
The declaration calls for urgent action to ensure that Brazil’s domestic legislation and international obligations concerning protection of human rights and environmental defenders are effectively implemented, including a complete, independent, and impartial investigation of the assassination of Dilma Ferreira Silva, along with preventative action to avoid further acts of violence. Such preventative action is urgently needed in cases where activists are currently under threat, such as Ana Flavia Nascimento, a MAB leader in the area impacted by the Santo Antônio and Jirau dams on the Madeira River.
As described in the joint statement, the tragic loss of Dilma Ferreira Silva in the area impacted by the Tucurui Dam, built on the Tocantins River during the country’s military dictatorship, is not without precedent: a union leader who fought on behalf of people whose livelihoods were devastated by the Tucuruí Dam was assassinated there in April, 2009.
Statement on the Assassination of Dilma Ferreira Silva, leader of Brazil’s Movement of Dam-Affected Peoples (MAB)
In the face of the brutal crime committed against a coordinator of the Movement of Dam-Affected Peoples in Brazil, the undersigned human rights and environmental organizations call on Brazilian authorities and multilateral organizations to ensure that the country’s obligations regarding the protection of human rights and environmental defenders are enforced.
With deep sadness and indignation, we received the news that Dilma Ferreira Silva, a regional coordinator of Brazil’s Movement of Dam-Affected Peoples (MAB), was assassinated on Friday, March 22nd in the Amazonian state of Pará, together with her husband Claudionor Costa da Silva and Hilton Lopes, a friend of the family. The bodies of the three victims were found in her residence with signs of torture.
Dilma Ferreira Silva was a prominent activist and recognized leader who, for more than three decades, fought for the rights of the people affected by the Tucuruí mega-hydroelectric dam project on the Tocantins River of the Brazilian Amazon, built during the country’s military dictatorship 1964-1985), provoking the displacement of an estimated 32,000 people, along with serious environmental damage. This is not the first case of a brutal murder perpetrated against a human rights defender in the region of the Tucurui dam. In April 2009, Raimundo Nonato do Carmo, a union leader who fought on behalf of those whose lives were ruined by the Tucuruí dam was shot seven times by two men on a motorcycle as he walked out of a supermarket on the street in which he lived in the town of Tucuruí.
Dilma dedicated her life to promoting national policies that would effectively take into account the rights of dam-affected peoples, with due attention to gender issues that particularly affect the rights of women.
Dilma Ferreira lived in the rural settlement of Salvador Allende, where land titles were issued for family farmers by the federal government in 2012, as a result of a popular mobilization of the Movement of the Landless Workers (MST), with support from MAB. However, the area continued to be coveted by land grabbers (grileiros) that invade and seize control of public and community lands. One such example is Fernando Ferreira Rosa Filho (aka ‘Fernandinho’) arrested by the civil police force of the state of Pará as the principal suspect in the triple homicide of Dilma Ferreira, Claudionor Costa da Silva and Hilton Lopes.
The assassination of Dilma Ferreira Silva is evidence of the grave situation faced by human rights and environmental defenders in Brazil, a country that tops the global ranking in violence practiced against defenders, with one person murdered every six days in 2017.
The incoming administration of President Jair Bolsonaro has intensified recent attempts to undermine Brazil’s progressive legislation on environmental protection and human rights – especially those of indigenous peoples, quilombolas (descendants of African slaves), family farmers and other traditional populations. Such attempts have often clashed with Brazil’s progressive Federal Constitution, approved in 1988 during a period of redemocratization that followed military rule. Backsliding on public policies, together with public statements that incite violence in conflictive areas, are seriously increasing the risks faced by human rights and environmental defenders such as Dilma Ferreira Silva.
International Rivers in Solidarity
The undersigned human rights and environmental organizations express our solidarity with the family of Dilma and the Movement of Dam-Affected Peoples (MAB). Without a doubt, her assassination is a huge loss for the defense of the environment and human rights in the Amazon.
We stand with the UN High Commissioner on Human Rights in demanding a complete, independent and impartial investigation of the assassination of Dilma Ferreira Silva, as well as the exemplary punishment of those that carried out and ordered this horrendous crime.
Moreover, we call on Brazilian authorities to ensure that the country’s domestic legislation and international obligations regarding the protection of human rights and environmental defenders are fully implemented, including preventative action to avoid further acts of violence.
See joint statement in English with complete list of co-signing organizations here More information:
- The joint statement on the assassination of Dilma Ferreira Silva is also available in Portuguese and Spanish
- Visit our Facebook page and Twitter feed for examples on how you can help disseminate the declaration, calling for the protection of Brazil’s human rights and environmental defenders! Be sure to use the hashtag #DilmaFerreiraPresente
- Further information from MAB
Photo: Dilma Ferreira da Silva by: MAB