HIRED TO KILL: The two suspected hitmen and the go-between who hired them have been charged with conspiracy to murder
AFP , BRASILIA AND ALTAMIRA
Tuesday, Feb 22, 2005,Page 7
A second suspect sought in the murder of a US-born nun who was an advocate for landless farmers was arrested late Sunday in the Brazilian state of Para, police said. <snip>
Rayfran is the second suspect in the murder of Dorothy Stang, a 74-year-old missionary who spent decades working with the poor in Para state, arrested by Brazilian police. <snip>
The hit men earned US$19,000 dollars in cash for the murder, according to the daily O Estado de Sao Paulo. <snip>
http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/world/archives/2005/02/22/2003224143<edit:> The rainforest fight goes on
Practices haven't changes along with laws
By MICHAEL ASTOR
The Associated Press
N THE BOA ESPERANCA SETTLEMENT, Brazil - A crude cross of tree branches marks the spot where American nun Dorothy Stang died on a red mud road cutting through dense green jungle. It also marks ground zero of a battle over how the Amazon, the world's largest remaining tropical wilderness, will be developed - or destroyed.
Stang, 73, a spunky, softly spoken nun from Dayton, Ohio, was shot dead on Feb. 12 in a dispute with an influential rancher in the eastern Amazon state of Para, on the frontier of forest and development, where powerful interests collide with the Amazon's poor.
"Before she came here, she was in southern Para, where loggers cut down everything, and she saw that model brought only disgrace for many and improvements for only a few," said Felicio Pontes Jr., a federal prosecutor who often worked with Stang on land issues. "She vowed not to let that happen here."
That vow cost Stang her life - and made her a symbol for rain forest defenders. <snip>
http://www.concordmonitor.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050220/REPOSITORY/502200404/1037/NEWS04