BRAZIL CHIEF PAIAKAN FRAMED?
Rape
charges against a Brazilian Indian leader smell of political frame-up.
The fight to save the world's
tropical rain forests has spawned its heroes and its martyrs, none more
renowned than Chico Mendes, the leader of the rubber tappers who was gunned
down in the western Amazon four years ago.
Since Mendes' murder, the man who has
perhaps come best to symbolize the struggle to save the Amazon is an Indian
chief named Paulinho Paiakan of the Kayapo tribe who live on a tributary of the
But now Paiakan's
stature as an environmentalist and indigenous leader is threatening to crumble.
And if his career ends in disgrace and maybe a prison cell, the rain forest
movement will itself have sustained a serious blow. Already
Paiakan's potential
downfall stems from charges of rape. Previous supporters have divided violently
on the issue. Paiakan's allies charge racism abetting a frame up, exemplified
by the cover of a mass-circulation magazine, Veja, that featured a cover photo
of Paiakan with the words, "The Savage" splashed across it. Many
Brazilian liberals see Paiakan as an uppity Indian getting his comeuppance.
The case against
Paiakan at first seems overwhelming. On the last Sunday in May, the
Kayapo chief took his wife, Irekran, his little girl, Maia, and some relatives
to a campground he owned outside Redencao, a town on the edge of the Kayapo
lands. He also invited along a non Indian young woman of 18, Leticia
Ferreira. At the end of the day, after a fair amount of beer drinking,
Paiakan set off for Redencao with Irekran and Maia in the front seat of his
white Chevette and Ferreira in the back. As Veja reported Ferreira's version,
Paiakan stopped the car on the empty, dark road, turned off the lights and
locked both doors. He and Irekran jumped over the seat and began to beat up
Ferreria. Veja quoted Redencao police chief Jose Barbosa as saying that the car
was so bloodied it looked as if an animal had been butchered inside. Doctors,
said the magazine, confirmed that Ferreira had been raped.
The truth may be
physically less violent and politically more complex. Here are some of the
facts omitted by Paiakan's accusers: The couple to whose house Ferreira made
her way immediately after the incident say that she was calm and without the
major injuries later asserted in the account in Veja. Scott Wallace, an
American free-lance journalist to whom the couple spoke, also established that
there were no blood stains in the Chevette.
Ferreira's charges
were relayed by her uncle, who is running for Mayor of Redencao on an
anti-Indian platform. This uncle immediately enlisted the services of the
legal assistant to the governor of the state of
Paiakan denies
either raping or beating Ferreira. Irekran, who speaks only Kayapo, last week
told anthropologist Darrell Posey, who has known the couple for years, that
Ferreira invited herself to their picnic, got drunk and in the car on the way
home, fondled Paiakan. Irekran said she told Paiakan to stop the car and then
attacked Ferreira. "I can remember the blood under my fingernails,"
Irekran said, adding that she would do it again. She said Paiakan held her back
while Ferreira escaped.
This article appears here with permission of Alexander Cockburn, the owner of this copy written material.
