A Genuine South American Hero
Paraguay’s Lugo: A Genuine South American Hero and a Worthy Challenge to Brazil
As many Latin American policy analysts have suggested, the election of moderate-left Fernando Lugo and his Alianza Patriotica para el Cambio coalition is yet another manifestation of a South American referendum in favor of a socialist-tinged democracy. Undoubtedly, Lugo’s inauguration marked a transformative moment in the government’s position towards Paraguay’s longstanding agribusiness-export model. This is an issue dominated by socioeconomic political tensions, which are likely to break out between the country’s Brazilian landowners and irredentist Paraguayans. Meanwhile, watchful government officials in Brasilia are carefully monitoring the developments next door.
Lugo’s presidential campaign for social change had drawn intense support from Paraguay’s campesinos in a country where 1 percent of the population owns 77 percent of the land. On April 9, ten days before his election, Lugo, a former bishop, staged a “‘march for hope’” in the capital city of Asunción, with 5,000 supporters in attendance. Feeding the hopes of the crowd, Lugo referred to the brasiguayos, or longstanding Brazilian land-owning elite residents of Paraguay, as a “mafia” and held a moment of silence for two campesinos recently killed in land struggles in Tekojoja. Assuring his supporters that “’the mafia’s reign [was] coming to an end,’” Lugo’s triumphant early victory speech did not fully indicate the complex reality of the issue.
Now that the excitement surrounding Lugo’s impressive April 20 election has begun to fade, he is struggling to discover a viable approach towards taxing soya exports in a down market in order to provide funds for an extensive domestic social program the country so desperately needs. To do this, he will have to bring both sides to the table to avoid sparking a full-blown conflict between large-scale Brazilian agribusinesses in Paraguay and community farmers, who have been relegated to tiny plots of land spread throughout the country. Complicating matters is his stated intent to renegotiate the Itaipu Dam treaty with Brazil, which would provide a higher level of compensation for Paraguayan energy sales to Brazilian entities. As brasiguayos face increasing pressure from resident militant campesino resistance groups, Brasilia is bound to be less responsive towards Asunción’s urgent supplications.
Brazilian
Agribusinesses in Paraguay
The ubiquitous presence of
foreign agribusinesses in Paraguay is a long-standing fact
of life. Following its humiliating defeat in the War of the
Triple Alliance in 1870, Paraguay, out of desperation, sold
large tracts of government-owned land to help pay off its
huge war debt. “Political cronies” of the government
often received “the most fertile parcels,” which they
then resold to the brasiguayos, making a handsome
profit from the transaction . During his 35-year rule,
Colorado Party dictator Alfredo Stroessner stalwartly
represented agricultural institutions that favored the
wealthy foreign-linked landowners, through the creation of
the Paraguayan Institute for Rural Reform, whose mission was
to legitimize the incursion of agribusiness into
campesino communities. The Paraguayan National
Security Doctrine, a curious piece of legislation, set up a
cooperative system of elite-run surveillance and monitoring
enterprises, which could effectively stifle the possibility
of an organized peasant revolt.
According to the report titled “The Refugees of the Agroexport Model” by the Asunción-based research group, BASE-IS, the “Round–up Ready” soya boom that began in 1999 initiated the widespread use of powerful agrochemicals like Round-up, which, because of their arguably adverse health effects, severely affected the livelihood of peasant communities. The prevalent use of these agrotoxins by large Paraguay-based soya agribusinesses, has presented a host of problems to campesino populations utilizing the traditional small-scale farming model. Among the negative consequences of unregulated spraying have been the pollution of local water sources and the poisoning of farm animals which represent an all-important source of physical capital for small farmers. In his first speech to the UN General Assembly, Lugo expressed his disgust with the negative practices of Brazilian-related agribusiness, which he referred to as “the terrorism that affects the children in my country who die as a result of agricultural toxins.” Now that a champion of the traditionally marginalized campesino community has been elected chief of state, rural groups throughout Paraguay are intensifying their efforts to petition for an equitable redistribution of the land. On October 3, a protester was killed in a confrontation between police and 150 peasants attempting to occupy a brasiguayo’s estate in Alto Parana. Shortly after in Asunción, Lugo established a temporary agreement between several campesino organizations to halt land invasions, which could prompt dangerous confrontations with Brazil, in exchange for a promise to speed up plans for agrarian reform.
Brazilian
Negotiations
On October 27, the fruits of that
promise began to show. While meeting at the White House with
President George W. Bush, Lugo announced his government’s
purchase of 22,000 hectares of land from 11 Brazilian soya
producers based in San Pedro. A consensus had been achieved
during a meeting with campesino land reform groups
and brasiguayos at the presidential palace. This
represented a significant achievement for Lugo, but did not
diminish the fact that Brazilian authorities will continue
to seek complete protection for the large number of
Brazilians living throughout Paraguay. In late October, the
Brazilian military temporarily occupied the “Friendship
Bridge” in Itaipu as a warning to Paraguay that should
Asuncion fail to take measures to guarantee the safety of
wealthy foreign agriculturalists currently stationed within
the country, this could be a dangerous consequence. A senior
Brazilian official has claimed that the occupation was part
of a series of “periodic exercises” to eradicate illegal
commerce in the area.
The issue has become increasingly complicated as Lugo also seeks to renegotiate the bilateral Itaipu dam treaty. While Brazil currently pays $ 200 million for 95 percent of the power produced by the jointly-owned dam, Lugo seeks to increase this to $ 1.5 billion, which he and his aides believe to be the fair market price for the energy produced at the facility. Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva repeatedly has stated that the current price will have to remain in place. Nevertheless, Lula’s consent to such a deal could be used as a powerful bargaining chip in exchange for increased protection for his countrymen and their corporate farms in Paraguay. Lugo would be wise to keep this in mind if he wishes for land reform to be a welcomed centerpiece of his mandate for change in Paraguay.