IMPUNITY BRAZIL
WHEREAS
the investigation into the 1995 murder of Reinaldo Coutinho da Silva remains
virtually stalled because the Civil Police claims difficulties in obtaining
evidence that would lead to identification of the murderers and those behind
the crime
WHEREAS
the investigation into the January 14, 1998, murder of Manoel Leal de Oliveira
has progressed a great deal thanks to the efforts of Judge Marcos Bandeira
and District Attorney Cinthia Portela, but the name of the person who masterminded
has never been determined and one of the accused, who is at large, was seen
in the city where the journalist was murdered in a clash with police
WHEREAS
the murderers of Edgar Lopes de Faria, killed on October 29, 1997, have not
been identified due to technical difficulties of the police in pursuing their
investigation and to witnesses continuing to be fearful of talking
WHEREAS
District Attorney João Alves da Silva Neto is encountering bureaucratic
red tape and political pressure in seeking to identify those responsible for
the October 9, 1997, murder of radio show host Ronaldo Santana de Araújo
WHEREAS
the investigation into the murder of television anchor José Carlos
Mesquita finally led to the jailing of Orico Rodrigues, one of the accused
who had been on the run, but the other accused remains at large and the person
who masterminded the crime has gone unpunished
WHEREAS
former police officer Divino José de Matos, known as Divino 45, named
as the person who killed journalist Mário Eugênio Rafael de Oliveira
on November 11, 1984, remains at large following the change of his 17 years’
imprisonment sentence, and despite evidence that he was living in another
state the police have not yet been able to loctate him
WHEREAS
Aristeu Guida da Silva was murdered on May 12, 1995, and Vladimir Rainieri
Pereira Sobrosa, accused of being one of the perpetrators, was sentenced to
28 years’ imprisonment, appealed the sentence and is now awaiting a
new trial, and other accused remain at large
WHEREAS
businessman Domingos Sávio Brandão de Lima, owner of the newspaper
Folha do Estado de Mato Grosso and radio station Cidade de Cuiabá FM,
was murdered on SEptember 30, 2002, the Civil Police named one of the suspects
as having carried out the crime and he is in custody, but investigations are
continuing to determine who was behind the murder
WHEREAS
the police casefile in the investigation into the April 22, 1991, disappearance
of radio show host Ivan Rocha was shelved, despite the alleged kidnappers
being identified, arrested, held in custody and then released for lack of
evidence
WHEREAS
Principle 4 of the Declaration of Chapultepec hold that “freedom of
expression and of the press are severely limited by murder, terrorism, kidnapping,
pressure, intimidation, the unjust imprisonment of journalists, the destruction
of facilities, violence of any kind and impunity for perpetrators. Such acts
must be investigated promptly and punished harshly”
THE IAPA MIDYEAR MEETING RESOLVES
to ask the Brazilian government for the investigation of the crimes against
human rights, including the murder of journalists and radio announcers, to
be transferred to the jurisdiction of the Federal Police.
to request expansion and improvement of the witness
protection program, unknown to people in general, which fails to meet the
demand and in some cases keeps witnesses in a very precarious situation which
makes many of them prefer not to take part in the program
to ask the federal government and state governors
to make a commitment to the right to freedom of expression and an end to impunity
to ask the federal government and municipal and
state governments to give a guarantee of transparency in information, so that
reporters may follow investigations and legal proceedings, contrary to what
is stipulated under the Gag Law and other internal guidelines on the control
of information
to ask the Secretaries for Public Safety of the
states of Mato Gross, Mato Grosso do Sul, Bahia, Rio de Janeiro, Brasília,
Sergipe, Espírito Santo and Rondônia to provide the technical
conditions and infrastructure to enable police to effectively investigate
crime, including payment of expenses for tracking down suspects, a speed-up
in forensic ballistic, DNA testing and fingerprinting lab work, provision
of vehicles for basic investigations, and a speed up in the issuance of arrest
warrants
to urge to police and the judiciary that investigations
not be limited to the identification and arrest of the actual murderers but
also include those behind the crimes
to ask the Public Safety Secretaries of the states
to have those arrested moved to maximum security prisons, so as to prevent
their escape
to ask for the implementation of a more efficient
program for hunting down fugitives, inter-connecting the states so that police
around the country can easily identify suspects whose arrest is sought and
actually carry out such arrest
to request the necessary means to prevent bureaucracy
and corruption thwarting due process and delaying trial of the accused.