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  Home arrow Back Issues arrow 2004 arrow August 2004 arrow Brazil to Indemnify Families of ''Politically Missing'' Saturday, 21 November 2009 
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Brazil to Indemnify Families of ''Politically Missing'' PDF Print E-mail
Written by Brazzil Magazine   
Friday, 27 August 2004
During the military dictatorship which ruled Brazil from 1964 to 1985, a number of people who opposed the regime disappeared. They are known as the "politically missing" and a commission has been set up to deal with paying their families indemnity. Known as the Special Comission for the Politically Missing and Dead, it is presently examining 13 cases.

Many of these cases are based on a new law which went into effect in June of this year which recognizes state culpability in forced suicides, suicides caused by psychological trauma resulting from torture and deaths that occurred during public demonstrations against the government between September 1961 and October 1988.

Prior to this law the government paid indemnity only in cases of deaths which occurred while in state custody.

On August 14, 2003, the federal government reinstalled the Commission on Dead and Missing Political Activitists, linked to the Special Secretariat for Human Rights, for the purpose of indemnifying the relatives of victims of the military regime.

Created in 1995, the commission has already conceded indemnities to 280 family members, but many were excluded as a result of flaws in criteria and information. In general, the amount of the indemnity varies between 100,000 reais (US$ 33,000) and 150,000 reais (US$50,000).

During the period between 1964 and 1985, the military dictatorship that took power in Brazil through a coup caused the death or disappearance of approximately 480 people, according to investigations conducted by human rights organizations. 

Before the recent change Brazilian law only benefitted relatives of political activitists who were killed in security facilities, while they were imprisoned. 102 cases rejected by the commission, some of them because of this type of restriction, will be reevaluated.

Another new feature is the creation of a DNA bank, which will store genetic information on the victims' relatives. This information will be cross-checked against the skeletal remains that have been discovered.

The resuscitation of the Commission coincided with a judicial decision that revived the discussion over victims of the military regime. On July 22 of last year, Federal Judge Solange Salgado, from Brasília, ordered the breaking of official secrecy on all military operations in the campaign against the Araguaia guerrilla movement.

The Araguaia movement was organized in 1966 by the PC do B (Partido Comunista do Brasil—Communist Party of Brazil) on the borders between Tocantins, Pará, and Maranhão, a region known as Bico do Papagaio (Parrot's Beak).

The guerrilla members opposed the military regime and wanted to establish an independent state in the region. The movement was crushed by the Armed Forces in 1974.  

Agência Brasil

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