Dino authorizes mining on Cinta Larga lands under indigenous control

Supreme Court Justice Flávio Dino has authorized mineral exploration on Cinta Larga indigenous lands in Mato Grosso and Rondônia, provided it is under community control and meets environmental and social standards. The precautionary ruling, issued on February 3, sets a two-year deadline for Congress to regulate the issue. The decision aims to curb illegal mining and ensure benefits for indigenous people.

In a precautionary ruling issued on Tuesday (February 3), Supreme Court Justice Flávio Dino authorized mineral exploration on Cinta Larga indigenous territories in Mato Grosso and Rondônia. The permission requires direct control by the indigenous communities and compliance with environmental, social, and legal standards, responding to a petition filed in October by the Coordination of Cinta Larga Indigenous Organizations.

The lawsuit pointed to Congress's failure to regulate Article 231 of the Constitution, which has mandated indigenous participation in mineral resource exploitation on their lands since 1988. Dino noted that this oversight has fueled illegal mining, criminal organizations, and violence in indigenous areas, leading to environmental damage and economic exclusion for native peoples. “It is not compatible with the Constitution to maintain a model in which indigenous people are left only with the damages and violence,” the justice stated in the ruling.

To break this cycle, the Supreme Court set a two-year deadline for the legislature to enact specific legislation. If unmet, the court's provisional rules will remain in effect. Exploration is capped at 1% of the total demarcated area, requiring free, prior, and informed consultation with affected communities under International Labour Organization Convention 169. Environmental licensing, impact studies, and area recovery plans are also mandatory.

Indigenous peoples will receive full participation in economic outcomes, with funds prioritized for territorial protection, environmental restoration, and projects in health, education, and sustainability. Oversight will come from federal bodies including Funai, Ibama, the National Mining Agency (ANM), and the Federal Public Prosecutor's Office.

Liittyvät artikkelit

Justice Flávio Dino symbolically suspending extra government benefits across Brazil's executive, legislative, and judicial branches amid salary hike controversy.
AI:n luoma kuva

Minister Dino suspends extra benefits across three powers

Raportoinut AI AI:n luoma kuva

Supreme Court Justice Flávio Dino ordered the suspension of extra benefits known as penduricalhos across Brazil's three branches of government, with a 60-day review period. The ruling aims to curb supersalaries that evade the constitutional cap of R$ 46,366.19. Meanwhile, Congress approved salary hikes and new perks for its staff, costing at least R$ 650 million yearly.

The Supreme Federal Court (Stf) declared unconstitutional, by a 9-1 vote, the temporal framework for indigenous land demarcation on Thursday (18), invalidating the thesis that indigenous peoples only have rights to areas occupied until 1988. The ruling, reported by Minister Gilmar Mendes, reinforces the protection of fundamental rights and sets deadlines for completing pending processes. The judgment responds to a law passed by Congress in reaction to a 2023 precedent.

Raportoinut AI

Funai indigenists monitor isolated indigenous groups in southern Amazonas through forest traces like tree marks and abandoned campsites. The expedition to the Mamoriá Grande territory highlights efforts to preserve these peoples' voluntary isolation, threatened by diseases and invasions. The STF's recent rejection of the marco temporal bolsters land protection.

Four days after the Supreme Federal Court's 9-1 decision declaring the temporal framework unconstitutional, a federal deputy from PL-MS and president of the Chamber's Agriculture Commission criticized the ruling for disregarding constitutional intent and imposing insecurity on rural producers with good-faith titles. Congress had approved a law and a constitutional amendment proposal supporting the framework.

Raportoinut AI

In response to the crisis with the audiovisual sector, the Lula government released a note highlighting five priority points for the streaming regulation bill in the Senate. The move comes after criticism from actor Wagner Moura and revelations in an audio from producer Paula Lavigne about alleged internal conspiracies. The text emphasizes advances like the 10% quota for Brazilian content but admits defeats on the Condecine rate.

Chile's Supreme Court rejected Tianqi's no-innovation order on Tuesday, aiming to halt the Codelco-SQM agreement for lithium extraction in the Salar de Atacama until 2060. The Third Chamber's ruling follows the Santiago Court of Appeals' prior denial. The deal still awaits final approval from the Comptroller General of the Republic.

Raportoinut AI

Two opinion pieces in Folha de S.Paulo debate whether Brazil's oil royalties distribution should change. Maricá's mayor advocates for reform to promote social justice, while CBIE directors argue the current model compensates local impacts and the issue lies in resource misuse.

 

 

 

Tämä verkkosivusto käyttää evästeitä

Käytämme evästeitä analyysiä varten parantaaksemme sivustoamme. Lue tietosuojakäytäntömme tietosuojakäytäntö lisätietoja varten.
Hylkää