Soy grown illegally on Brazil's tribal lands finds its way to global
markets
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[September 05, 2024] By
Ana Mano
PASSO FUNDO, Brazil (Reuters) - Farm cooperatives in Brazil that supply
some of the world's biggest multinational agricultural firms are buying
soybeans grown illegally on Indigenous reservations in the country,
according to tribal leaders and court records, despite the companies'
public pledges to respect the land rights and resources of Indigenous
peoples.
The expansion of commercial farming onto Indigenous lands, which make up
about 13% of Brazil's territory, has stirred division and violent
conflicts in scores of communities, according to the federal police, the
Catholic Church's Indigenous Missionary Council and the Brazilian
government agency overseeing Indigenous affairs, FUNAI.
Brazil's constitution set aside lands for the exclusive use of
Indigenous communities while a 1973 law outlaws renting these lands or
forming partnerships to grow commercial crops.
But the restrictions are not codified in the country's penal code, which
makes enforcement difficult, federal police say. And while it is legal
for tribal members to grow soybeans themselves, few of them have access
to the funds needed to go into commercial-scale farming.
Since 2013, the area devoted to soy cultivation across the 14 Indigenous
reservations in Brazil's southernmost state of Rio Grande do Sul has
grown to nearly 28,000 hectares (70,000 acres), a 23% increase over the
decade, according to previously unreported satellite data provided to
Reuters by MapBiomas, a nonprofit land-use research group.
"The people in charge, the chiefs, are making a lot of money while the
rest of the community is dying of hunger," said Aldronei Rodrigues,
federal police regional superintendent in Rio Grande do Sul.
For many members of Brazil's Indigenous communities, leasing lands
remains one of their best economic options, according to FUNAI. The
agency said in a statement to Reuters that government policies do not
provide sufficient access to credit or technical support to help tribal
members go into commercial farming on their own.
With jobs scarce on the reservations, many people migrate to find work
as seasonal laborers or in meatpacking plants for relatively low pay,
local residents said.
"The search for better living conditions gave rise to different illicit
activities, [including] leasing and cultivation of genetically modified
crops[on their lands], notably in the south of the country," FUNAI said.
Brazil is the world's biggest producer and exporter of soybeans, which
are used in animal feed, biofuels and processed food. Industry trade
data shows two-thirds of Brazil's harvest ultimately ends up in global
markets.
In Rio Grande do Sul, which has a population of 10.8 million, almost all
of the harvest is sold to farming co-operatives including Cotrijal
Cooperativa Agropecuaria e Industrial (Cotrijal) and Cooperativa
Triticola Sarandi (Cotrisal), the two biggest in the state, according to
two grain brokers.
Reuters spoke to four Indigenous leaders, including the chiefs of the
Serrinha and Nonoai reservations, two of the most involved in soy
cultivation in the north of Rio Grande do Sul state, who said the
commercial crops raised on their lands were sold to Cotrisal and other
farming co-operatives.
Three more Indigenous community members in Rio Grande do Sul, who spoke
on condition of anonymity, also told Reuters Cotrisal was a major buyer
of soy raised by non-Indigenous farmers on leased tribal land.
"We always do this kind of thing - the leasing - against our will
because we can't let Indians go hungry," said Jose Oreste do Nascimento,
who has led the Nonoai community of about 3,600 people for more than
four decades.
About one-third of the 20,000-hectare reservation is given over to soy
cultivation, the satellite images showed, almost five times larger than
the soy area in 1985, when MapBiomas records began.
Marciano Inacio Claudino, chief of the Serrinha territory, also told
Reuters that Cotrisal regularly buys soybeans from non-indigenous
farmers leasing on his tribal land. Serrinha's territory is 12,000
hectares, and, according to satellite data, grows soybeans on some 6,000
hectares.
"Cotrisal is the main one," he said.
Helvio Debona, a senior Cotrisal executive, and Enio Schroeder,
Cotrijal's vice-president, told Reuters in interviews in April, when Rio
Grande do Sul farmers were reaping their 2024 soy, that they sell to
large trading companies including ADM, Bunge, Cargill, Louis Dreyfus and
COFCO.
'SOYBEANS DON'T COME WITH A BRAND'
When asked about possible sourcing of soy grown illegally on Indigenous
land, Cotrisal's Debona said that it is impossible to trace the origin
of 100% of its grain purchases.
"We can't guarantee," he said in an interview. "Soybeans don't come with
a brand."
Cotrisal did not respond to emailed requests for further comment.
Cotrijal said it had not bought grains from farmers leasing lands in
Serrinha and that it does not operate in the area.
Over the years, global agricultural companies have made assurances about
respecting land rights and human rights, highlighting their attention to
Indigenous communities in annual sustainability statements.
ADM made no mention of Indigenous rights or land disputes in its most
recent corporate sustainability report last year. In a human rights
report in 2022, the company noted the pervasiveness of land disputes in
South America and said that it is not directly implicated in any land
disputes. The 2022 report did not discuss cultivation on Indigenous
reserves.
[to top of second column] |
A drone view shows rural workers using agricultural machinery during
the soybean harvesting on the Nonoai indigenous land, in Nonoai,
state of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil, April 4, 2024. REUTERS/Diego
Vara
In an email to Reuters, ADM said it had investigated the news
agency's findings and found no evidence that the soy it purchased
had been raised on lands leased on the Nonoai and Serrinha
reservations.
"We do not source any grains from Indigenous territories in the Rio
Grande do Sul region," Jackie Anderson, an ADM spokesperson, said.
However, buying from large farmer cooperatives in southern Brazil
can obscure the origin of grains, according to six lawsuits filed
between 2008 and 2022 by federal prosecutors on behalf of the
tribes. At least two of the cases are ongoing.
Bunge, Cargill, COFCO and Louis Dreyfus did not respond to requests
for comment and referred questions to the national soy industry
group Abiove.
"Cotrijal and Cotrisal declared to us they don't buy grains produced
on the reservations of Nonoai and Serrinha," Abiove said in an
email.
Abiove said its members are pushing the cooperatives to ensure their
supply chains conform with laws and contractual obligations against
buying grains from protected territories.
Andre Nassar, president of Abiove, said in a separate statement that
traders can "stop all purchases" from a cooperative if it becomes
clear that it is sourcing soy from reservations.
Nassar said traders can also ask cooperatives for assurances that
the soybeans were raised by members of the Indigenous community –
and not leased to third parties.
Abiove did not respond to Reuters' questions on whether its members
ever turned down a purchase from Cotrisal or Cotrijal, and did not
provide further evidence of its efforts to remove grain from
indigenous lands from its supply chain.
'A NEFARIOUS PRACTICE'
Reuters reviewed court records including a November 2018 Cotrisal
invoice for herbicide purchases against future delivery of grains
issued to a farmer being sued by federal prosecutors for leasing
land to plant soy in Serrinha.
Court rulings in 2017 and 2018, reviewed by the news agency, ordered
the seizure of tons of soy grown on Indigenous lands from silos
operated by Cotrisal, Cotrijal and other cooperatives.
Cotrisal and Cotrijal did not respond to requests for comment on the
seizures.
In a July 2022 decision ordering measures to stop the practice,
Federal Judge Diogo Edele Pimentel said private leasing of lands in
the Nonoai territory was a major source of division.
"It is a nefarious practice of private appropriation of a public
good, completely disfiguring its collective nature and deepening
inequality in these communities," he wrote.
Nascimento, the Nonoai chief, as well as his son and a former FUNAI
official, were fined a total of around 4.5 million reais (nearly
$800,000) for embezzling profits from the illegal leases, according
to a July 2019 ruling seen by Reuters.
Nascimento said an appeal is pending, and that "all is back to
normal," with non-Indigenous farmers delivering their harvests to
the same coops, including Cotrisal.
"The soy is sold on the local market. There are farm cooperatives
all around the Indigenous territories. There is Cotrisal... and
other large cooperatives which buy any quantity of soy, corn,
everything," he said.
Reuters could not independently verify whether the lawsuit remains
active.
In 2021, 11 members of the Serrinha community filed a civil lawsuit
in the federal court of Carazinho, Rio Grande do Sul, accusing their
chief Claudino of controlling the territory's soy trade to enrich
his family.
The 2021 lawsuit reviewed by Reuters said Claudino has crushed
dissent with "violence, oppression and human rights violations."
In a telephone interview, Claudino said his opponents spread lies
about his leadership and that most of the community supports him.
The lawsuit is ongoing.
Claudino remains under investigation - but has not been charged - in
connection with a double homicide in Serrinha in 2021, which police
and local community members link to land and power disputes fueled
by the soy trade. He denies involvement in the killings.
At least 30 families who objected publicly to Claudino's involvement
in the soy trade have left the reservation since October 2021.
Several had their homes looted and ransacked, according to three of
the victims and a 2022 report by the federal human rights
commission, which connected the violence to the land leases.
Claudino said only a dozen families left the reservation in recent
years, some of whom have returned.
"Some are back already. I allowed it. But I'm not going to let
people come here and make trouble for me again," he said.
(Reporting by Ana Mano in Passo Fundo and Sao Paulo; Editing by Brad
Haynes and Suzanne Goldenberg)
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