By: Brandon Cottrell
Impunity Watch Reporter, North America
BRASÍLIA, Brazil – In 2005, Dorothy Stang, age 73, was murdered after being shot six times near the northern state of Para, Brazil. Vitalmiro Bastos de Moura, a rancher who had been arguing with Stang at the time over land use, was convicted and sentenced to thirty years in prison for the third time.
Prior to her death, Stang spent over thirty years trying to save the rainforests in Brazil. In particular, she wished to prevent wealthy landlords from exploiting the rainforests. She also defended the rights of the poor settlers, who were being confronted by ranchers trying to take their land. Her continually campaigning resulted in an attempt to prevent Moura from seizing land.
Prosecutors say that Moura is one of several who hired gunmen to kill Stang. This is also not the first time that violence has plagued a conflict involving Brazil’s natural resources. Over the past thirty years, at least one thousand people have been murdered and many others have been kidnapped, with many of these crimes occurring in Para. These crimes, which are generally carried out by gunmen hired by the loggers, ranchers, and farmers who wish to silence protestors like Stang are very rarely prosecuted and those that are prosecuted rarely result in convictions.
While prosecutors were able to convict Moura of murder in 2007 and in 2010, Moura’s lawyers were able to get the conviction overturned both times. Moura’s lawyers argued that there was not sufficient evidence linking him to the crime in 2007 and that they did not have enough time to prepare his defense in 2010.
Of the others involved in the murder of Stang, one is appealing his thirty-year sentence and the self-confessed killer is serving the remainder of a twenty-seven year sentence under house arrest. Another suspect, however, is still at large.
Barbara Richardson, Stang’s sister, said that while the repeated trials have been upsetting that it at least “keeps the injustice of the system before the people’s eyes.” Additionally, many of Stang’s fellow activists were happy to see justice in this case, as they have “fiercely criticized Brazil’s judiciary system as moving to slowly and being too lenient.”
Others also tout the conviction as “a symbol of the end of impunity for the killings of landless squatter farmers who often have clashed with big landowners.”
For more information, please see:
BBC – Rancher Convicted Over Murder Of US Nun Dorothy Stang – 20 September 2013
Global Post – Brazil Rancher’s Conviction Upheld In US Nun’s Death – 20 September 2013
Reuters – Brazilian Rancher Found Guilty Of Ordering American Nun’s Death – 20 September 2013
USA Today – Rancher Gets 30 Years In Death Of U.S. Nun – 20 September 2013