HOME > Media

Blog shows how the North was 'generous' with Suzana Vieira's family.

After Globo actress Suzana Vieira made a derogatory statement that the North and Northeast regions "have no knowledge of what is being done here," referring to Operation Lava Jato, journalist and blogger Luciana Oliveira, from Porto Velho, Rondônia, highlighted how "the South and other regions need to know how 'generous' the North has been to the part of the actress's family that has lived in the North for decades."

After Globo actress Suzana Vieira said in a derogatory way that the North and Northeast "have no knowledge of what is being done here," in reference to Operation Lava Jato, journalist and blogger Luciana Oliveira from Porto Velho, Rondônia, highlights how "the South and other regions need to know how 'generous' the North has been to the part of the actress's family that has lived in the North for decades" (Photo: Gisele Federicce)

From Luciana Oliveira's Blog This is not the first time that actress Susana Vieira has spoken pejoratively about the Northern region of Portugal.

In interviews on the television network where he works and in other media outlets, he has said that part of his family "lives in the countryside."

The "bush" he refers to is Porto Velho, the capital of Rondônia, which today houses one of the most important projects in the country: the construction of the Jirau and Santo Antônio hydroelectric power plants.

Now, in an event in which she participated with six other artists in front of the Federal Court of Paraná (JFPR), in Curitiba, in support of Judge Sérgio Moro, she more explicitly displayed prejudice against the Northern region.

He called those who live here uninformed.

"I think that people from the North and Northeast are unaware of what is being done here."

She supports Judge Sérgio Moro's actions in Operation Lava Jato, which combats corruption.

Well then.

The South and other regions need to know how 'generous' the North has been to the part of the actress's family that has lived in the North for decades.

According to an article in O GLOBO, her sister, Susana Gonçalves, abandoned her career to live in Rondônia with her then-husband Paulo Sack, "who had just received an inheritance, in an adventure in Rondônia. The couple established themselves in the construction and hotel business."

image

image

Time goes by, and the now ex-husband, and therefore brother-in-law of actress Susana Vieira, is involved in a scandalous repossession lawsuit. He acquired the disputed land from the late former judge Aldo Alberto Castanheira e Silva.

An agrarian conflict stretching approximately 40 kilometers along Line 45 could result in an unprecedented tragedy.

Around 2 families are disputing in court the right to lands they claim belong to the Union.

The actress's brother-in-law is in the middle of this dispute, claiming part of the land, a portion between the Brasileira and Escalerita lakes.

The process is complex and it took 20 years for the repossession order to be issued.

New facts, such as the 'reappearance' of part of the process that had disappeared at Incra and the need for proper expert analysis, motivated the suspension of the enforcement of the injunction.

image

image

image

The area looks more like an urban district with several commercial and industrial establishments located in Vila Nova Samuel, and the military police would have difficulty ensuring the eviction without resistance from the families who have lived there for decades.

The fear of a violent conflict prompted authorities to hold a public hearing at the Legislative Assembly of the State of Rondônia, and several allegations came to light.

“This process is shrouded in mystery that needs to be clarified. We are facing a situation that requires extreme concern, as there are thousands of people who have been producing for decades against a plaintiff who has never produced anything. It is essential to verify the authenticity of two titles granted by the State of Amazonas, one in 1902 and the other in 1907, after all, the land must fulfill its social purpose,” emphasized the landholders' lawyer, Ernande Segismundo.