BEIJING, June 23 (Xinhuanet) -- Brazil President Luiz
Inacio Lula da Silva on Friday decreed a new 3.8 million acres Indian
reservation in the heart of the Amazon rain forest's logging frontier.
The Kayapo Indians had sought the Bau reservation in
Para state in their ancestral territory since 1994. But resistance from settlers
and loggers delayed its official creation.
"We are advancing little by little, but we are making
the necessary conquests," Silva said at the signing ceremony in the capital,
Brasilia.
Brazil's 1988 constitution declared all Indian
ancestral lands be demarcated and turned over to tribes within five years. While
that process has not been completed yet, today about 11 percent of Brazilian
territory and nearly 22 percent of the Amazon is in Indian hands.
But there has been increasing pressure on the
government to limit the size of reservations as logging, ranching and farming
expand into the Amazon. Some settlers have violently resisted efforts to
relocate them.
Studies show Indian reservations tend to be the
best preserved areas of the rain forest because the tribes protect the borders.
National parks and ecological reserves rarely have enough staff to police their
territory.
Marcio Meira, president of the National Indian
Foundation, said at the ceremony about half of the 1 million Indians in
Brazil are on reservations.
(Agencies)