BRASILIA, Brazil (AP) — Thousands of Indigenous people marched on Thursday in Brazil’s capital, calling on the government to officially recognize lands they have lived on for centuries and to protect territories from criminal activities such as illegal mining. With posters bearing messages like “The future is Indigenous,” they walked towards Three Powers Square, where Congress, the Supreme Court and the Planalto presidential palace are located in Brasilia. A group of Indigenous leaders entered the palace to talk to President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, while others shouted toward the building: “Our rights are not negotiable.” Last week, he backed down from the creation of four Indigenous territories, citing opposition from state governors. In addition to calls for more land recognition, some tribes protested a proposed 950-kilometer (590 miles) rail project to transport soybeans from the state of Mato Grosso, in the central part of the country, to ports along the Tapajos River, a large Amazon tributary. |
Italian thrill seekers head to China for extreme sports on world's highest bridgeChina launches new remote sensing satelliteEthnic performance nourishes soul, life in southwest ChinaChina launches new remote sensing satelliteFor Chinese youngsters, reading is the new social networking: surveyChess Preview: China's world champion Ding seeking first Asian Games goldInt'l photo festival brings fusion of tradition and modernity to China townA monument to heroesPhotographer gives Greeks online tour of ChinaRoof of the world inhabited since 50,000 years ago: archaeologists