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Native male shot dead as land dispute in Brazil farm state intensifies

In Brazil, a guy from the Guarani community was shot dead on Wednesday morning, a. governmental protection firm for Indigenous communities stated,. as a land dispute in the farm state of Mato Grosso do Sul. intensified.

It comes after a violent fight in early August. throughout which armed guys, backed by farmers in trucks and. tractors, assaulted Native individuals recovering land in the large. farming state, hurting 11 of them.

The man was shot in the head on Wednesday early morning, the. indigenous affairs firm Funai stated. The disagreement connects to the. Nhanderu Marangatu Indigenous Land situated in Mato Grosso do Sul. on the border with surrounding Paraguay.

Terras Indigenas, a database run by an ecological and. Native rights not-for-profit in Brazil, shows the land of some. 9,000 hectares has an population of about 1,350 and had been. acknowledged as Native area.

Funai stated it had actually asked the specialized federal prosecutor's. workplace to embrace all applicable legal procedures and had actually met. the judge accountable for the case.

( We are) dedicated to ensuring that this violence stops. instantly and that those responsible for these crimes are. carefully punished, it said in a statement.

Offered the seriousness of this matter, (Funai) is preparing. brand-new action before the Federal Regional Court of the 3rd Region,. in order to ensure the security of the indigenous. neighborhood, it added.

Ranchers have been wanting to clear land to plant soybeans. for export or raise livestock to produce beef. With Brazil's farm. frontier advancing toward the Amazon, disputes over land claimed. by Indigenous individuals have actually multiplied.

Violent land disputes have also become more regular and. sustained a continuous dispute over the movement to limit Native. claims to ancestral lands in a conservative Congress backed by a. powerful farm lobby.

Legislators have proposed a modification to the constitution. that would introduce a limit to land claims by Indigenous. communities made after 1988, despite the fact that the Supreme Court has. ruled that setting such a time framework was unconstitutional.

Less than half of the nation's 1.6 million Indigenous. individuals survive on about 13% of the country's land mass.

(source: Reuters)