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physicians determined there was nothing that could be done in their cases.
Moreover, according to the next of kin of the dead people, they received humiliating
treatment. Likewise, it was determined from the account of the mothers that several
children died from tetanus, measles and diarrhea.
The members of the Community have lived for many years in absolute
precariousness. The State is absent; there are no representatives of police, court or
welfare authorities, such as health care authorities.
i.
Statement by Mr. José Marcelo Brunstein-Alegre, expert witness
The territorial claims of the indigenous communities populating the Paraguayan
Chaco have unleashed a conflict of interests with the current owners, who are mostly
cattle farmers. The latter have resisted possible condemnations for the purpose of
favoring the territorial claims stating arguments aimed at justifying the advancement
of societies, openly alluding to the risk of their properties being expropriated and title
to them subsequently conveyed to indigenous communities “whose way of lifes are
based on hunting and gathering.” They argued that to reproduce that way of life in
current times would not only require an enormous amount of lands, but it would also
prevent the members of indigenous communities from “evolving” and enjoying “the
benefits of civilization.” The other argument supposedly involves an economic
consideration in that it states that the territorial claims by indigenous peoples causes
severe harm both to the livestock industry and to the investment and re-investment
process.
Paraguay stands out from the other countries in the region for the high proportion of
population still living in rural areas. These, in turn, concentrate most of the poor
population of the country. Thus, recent data suggest that Paraguay currently stands
as the most unequal society in the region. Inequality is evident in the national
agrarian structure reflected in the distribution of lands. Several studies have led to
dramatic findings as regards to land holding in Paraguay. Cattle farming uses
approximately twenty-two million hectares, while agriculture uses next to seven
million hectares. The extensive production system predominating among the cattle
farming establishments in Paraguay is the main cause of the faulty distribution of
lands in the country. A clear example is to be found in that the cattle farming
industry accounted for only 1.5% of the farming establishments in 1991, but they
used almost 80% of the productive lands.
The high proportion of lands with natural pastures and forests suggests that cattle
farming is by far the most important economic activity in connection with the use of
productive resources in the Chaco region. In an inequality environment, it is hard to
find a logical reason that justifies this land ownership structure. Firstly, the
comparison of the amount of resources used by the cattle farming establishments
with their contribution to the national economy is an initial indicator of how
inefficient they are. Even though agriculture uses only one third of the land owned by
the cattle farmers, this activity is three times as large as that of cattle farming with
regard to its share in the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), and has a much larger
share in total exports. A study performed in Paraguay found a clear inverse relation
between land productivity and the size of the estates.