Stabroek News

Colombia's top court orders government to protect Amazon forest in landmark case

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BOGOTA, (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Colombia's highest court has told the government it must take urgent action to protect its Amazon rainforest and stem rising deforestat­ion, in what campaigner­s said was an historic moment that should help conserve forests and counter climate change.

In their ruling on Thursday, the judges said that Colombia - which is home to a swathe of rainforest roughly the size of Germany and England combined - saw deforestat­ion rates in its Amazon region increase by 44 percent from 2015 to 2016.

"It is clear, despite numerous internatio­nal commitment­s, regulation­s ... that the Colombian state has not efficientl­y addressed the problem of deforestat­ion in the Amazon," the supreme court said.

The ruling comes after a group of 25 young plaintiffs, ranging in age from seven to 26, filed a lawsuit against the government in January demanding it protect their right to a healthy environmen­t.

The plaintiffs had said the government's failure to stop the destructio­n of the Amazon jeopardise­d their futures and violated their constituti­onal rights to a healthy environmen­t, life, food and water.

Bogota-based rights group Dejusticia, which supported the plaintiffs' case, said the verdict meant it was the first time a lawsuit of this kind had been ruled upon favourably in Latin America.

"The Supreme Court's decision marks an historical precedent in terms of climate change litigation," said Camila Bustos, one of the plaintiffs and a researcher at Dejusticia.

In its ruling, the court recognised Colombia's Amazon as an "entity subject of rights", which means that the rainforest has been granted the same legal rights as a human being.

"The ruling states the importance of protecting the rights of future generation­s, and even declares the Amazon a subject of rights," Bustos told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

The court ordered the government - both at the local and national level along with the environmen­t and agricultur­e ministries and environmen­tal authoritie­s to come up with action plans within four months to combat deforestat­ion in the Amazon.

The Amazon's destructio­n leads to "imminent and serious" damage to children and adults for both present and future generation­s, the judges said.

The ruling stated that forests were being felled to make way for more grazing and agricultur­al land, as well as coca crops - the raw ingredient for cocaine illegal mining and logging.

Deforestat­ion is a key source of greenhouse gas emissions driving climate change, which damages ecosystems and water sources and leads to land degradatio­n, the court said.

"Without a healthy environmen­t, subjects of law and living beings in general will not be able to survive, let alone safeguard those rights for our children or for future generation­s," the ruling said.

The lawsuit follows a surge in litigation around the world demanding action or claiming damages over the impact of climate change - from rising sea levels to pollution.

 ??  ?? The group of plaintiffs aged 7 to 26 who filed a climate change lawsuit against the Colombian government, Jan. 29, 2018.
The group of plaintiffs aged 7 to 26 who filed a climate change lawsuit against the Colombian government, Jan. 29, 2018.

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