"People who destroy forests feel safe and those who protect forests feel threatened."
Forest and topsoil must first be removed before ore can be accessed at
Brazil’s Norsk Hydro ASA Paragominas open pit mine. Such industrial
processes would be highly destructive of Brazil’s forests, indigenous
reserves and cultures. (Photo: Norsk Hydro ASA via VisualHunt / CC
BY-NC-SA.)
Satellite images reviewed by the Brazilian government show massive
deforestation in the Amazon rainforest, a grim reminder of the devastation
wrought by the country's new president, Jair Bolsonaro.
According to Reuters, 285 square miles of forest was cleared in May, the
highest one month total in a decade. The information comes from Brazilian
space research institute INPE's DETER alert system.
"If this upward curve continues, we could have a bad year for the Amazon
forest," said INPE satellite monitoring head Claudio Almeida.
The Amazon deforestation is just part of a global problem, said youth
activist
Greta
Thunberg.
"Disastrous deforestation like this must come to an end," Thunberg said.
"And not just in the Amazon... We are literally sawing off the branch we all
live on."
Green advocates blame the Bolsonaro government's attack on regulations on
deforestation and general anti-environmental policies for the jump in
clear-cutting.
The Bolsonaro administration in January announced its plans to open the
Amazon for resource exploitation—a move that came before the new presidency
was even a month old. At the time, Bolsonaro's chief of strategic affairs
Maynard Santa Rosa referred to the Amazon as an "unproductive, desertlike"
area that would benefit from development.
In April, as Common Dreams reported, indigenous activists in Brazil sounded
the alarm over the Bolsonaro government's attack on the rainforest and made
a non-violent demonstration at the country's capital city of Brasilia.
"The white man is our finishing off our planet and we want to defend it,"
Alessandra Munduruku, a representative of the Munduruku tribe from the
northern state of Pará, said during that protest.
Bolsonaro appears committed to that project.
"With Bolsonaro, people who destroy forests feel safe and those who protect
forests feel threatened," Marcio Astrini, public policy coordinator for
Greenpeace Brazil, told Reuters.
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