Brazil: Brazil's First Indigenous Congresswoman Defends Her People's Rights From Bolsonaro
                Feb 19, 2019
                
                
                    |
                
                Fabiano Maisonnave
                
                    
                
                
                
                    View Original
                
            
When indigenous leader Joênia Wapichana first came across Jair Bolsonaro, she was appalled. The year was 2008, and there was a heated debate about the demarcation of Raposa/Serra do Sol Indigenous Land (TIRSS), inhabited by 25,000 people from five different ethnicities in Brazil’s far north. While waiting for a final decision from the Supreme Court, white farmers resorted to violence. In the worst incident, ten indigenous people were shot, although not fatally.
