Brazil’s MST Promotes Agrarian Reform Amidst Environmental Crisis During Nature Day

Wait 5 sec.

Brazil’s Landless Rural Workers’ Movement (MST) launched the third edition of Nature Day this Monday, an initiative that is part of its national plan “Plant Trees, Produce Healthy Food.” The goal is not only reforestation but also strengthening popular agrarian reform as an alternative to the current environmental crisis.This was stated by Camilo Augusto, project coordinator, in an interview with local media. Since 2021, the MST has promoted this event across Brazil, carrying out activities that include planting, seed distribution and mobilizing around environmental preservation.A prominent example is in Paraná state, where aerial sowing of juçara palm and araucaria pine seeds has become a nationally recognized tradition. Both are endangered species. View this post on Instagram A post shared by MST (@movimentosemterra)This year, according to Camilo Augusto, the MST hopes to release more than 15 tons of these seeds. “It’s a real feat. In a protected area, this could remove these species from the endangered species list,” Augusto stated, highlighting the initiative’s potential impact.For the MST, Nature Day is also a fundamental tool for exposing those truly responsible for the climate emergency. “The important thing is to denounce those who deforest, burn and pollute the waters, and to present an alternative proposal that doesn’t rely solely on financial figures and data to solve the problem, as capital does,” Augusto explained.The event includes technical seed monitoring with the Federal University of Paraná (UFPR), measuring germination rates and planting effectiveness as environmental preservation strategies.Brazil: Military Police Violently Evicts Families of Landless Rural Workers’ Movement in Bahia StateThis initiative has support from traditional communities – including Indigenous peoples, riverside dwellers and quilombolas – and institutions like the National Institute of Colonization and Agrarian Reform (INCRA), Federal Police (PF), Ministry of Agrarian Development (MDA) and National Supply Company (CONAB).Brazil’s Landless Rural Workers’ Movement (MST) launched its third Nature Day, an event that not only seeks reforestation but also denounces those responsible for the environmental crisis and promotes popular agrarian reform as a transformative solution.  (Telesur)Translation: Orinoco TribuneOT/JRE/SH