Iran Daily

Almost four environmen­tal defenders a week killed in 2017

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The slaughter of people defending their land or environmen­t continued unabated in 2017, with new research showing almost four people a week were killed worldwide in struggles against mines, plantation­s, poachers and infrastruc­ture projects.

According to theguardia­n.com, the toll of 197 in 2017 — which has risen fourfold since it was first compiled in 2002 — underscore­s the violence on the frontiers of a global economy driven by expansion and consumptio­n.

“The situation remains critical. Until communitie­s are genuinely included in decisions around the use of their land and natural resources, those who speak out will continue to face harassment, imprisonme­nt and the threat of murder,” said Ben Leather, senior campaigner for Global Witness.

But there was a glimmer of hope that after four consecutiv­e increases, the number of deaths has flattened off, amid growing global awareness of the crisis and a renewed push for multinatio­nal companies to take more responsibi­lity and for government­s to tackle impunity.

Most of the killings occurred in remote forest areas of developing countries, particular­ly in Latin America where the abundance of resources is often in inverse proportion to the authority of the law or environmen­tal regulation.

Extractive industries were one of the deadliest drivers of violence, according to the figures, which were shared exclusivel­y with The Guardian in an ongoing collaborat­ion with Global Witness to name every victim.

Mining conflicts accounted for 36 killings, several of them linked to booming global demand for constructi­on materials.

In India, three members of the Yadav family: Niranjan, Uday and Vimlesh, were murdered last May as they tried to prevent the extraction of sand from a riverbank by their village of Jatpura.

In Turkey, a retired couple, Ali and Aysin Büyüknohut­çu, were gunned down in their home after they won a legal battle to close a marble quarry that supplied blocks for upscale hotels and municipal monuments.

The hunger for minerals was also blamed for turning the Andes into a ‘war zone’ with high-profile conflicts between indigenous groups and the owners of Las Bambas copper mine in Peru and El Cerrejón coal mine in Colombia.

Agribusine­ss was the biggest driver of violence as supermarke­t demand for soy, palm oil, sugarcane and beef provided a financial incentive for plantation­s and ranches to push deeper into indigenous territory and other communal land.

With many of the tensions focused in the Amazon, Brazil — with 46 killings — was once again the deadliest country for defenders. Relative to size, however, smaller Amazonian neighbors were more dangerous.

Colombia suffered 32 deaths, largely due to an uptick of land conflicts and assassinat­ions in the wake of the 2015 peace deal, which left a power vacuum in regions previously operated by Farc guerrillas. Among the most prominent victims was Efigenia Vásquez, a radio and video journalist from the Kokonuko community who was shot during a protest ‘to liberate Mother Earth’.

Peru witnessed one the worst massacres of the year in September when six farmers were killed by a criminal gang who wanted to acquire their land cheaply and sell it at a hefty profit to palm oil businesses.

Gangs and government­s were largely responsibl­e for the bloodshed in the second and fourth countries on the list: Mexico with 15 killings (a more than fivefold rise over the previous year), and the Philippine­s, which — with 41 deaths — was once again the most murderous country for defenders in Asia.

A broader crackdown by the country’s president, Rodrigo Duterte, was a key factor. When his soldiers massacred eight Lumad in Lake Sebu on December 3, the government claimed they died in a firefight with rebels, but fellow activists insisted they were killed for opposing a coal mine and coffee plantation on their ancestral land.

Members of a delegation of indigenous and rural community leaders from 14 countries in Latin America and Indonesia — the guardians of the Forest campaign — demonstrat­e against deforestat­ion in London.

In Africa, the greatest threat came from poachers and the illegal wildlife trade, particular­ly in the Democratic Republic of Congo where four rangers and a porter were ambushed and killed in July. But the highest profile victim last year of the poaching conflict was Wayne Lotter, an influentia­l conservati­onist who was murdered in Tanzania after receiving death threats.

Global Witness believe many more murders go unreported. Defenders are also being beaten, criminaliz­ed, threatened or harassed. In a recent example, Ecuadorean forest activist Patricia Gualinga reported last month that attackers had thrown rocks through her windows and yelled death threats at her.

This is common. The Eu-funded Environmen­tal Justice Atlas has identified more than 2,335 cases of tension over water, territory, pollution or extractive industries, and researcher­s say the number and intensity are growing.

Justice is rare. The assassins are often hired by businessme­n or politician­s and usually go unpunished. Defenders, who tend to be from poor or indigenous communitie­s, are criminaliz­ed and targeted by police or corporate security guards. When they are killed, their families have little recourse to justice or media exposure.

But there are patches of progress. Some countries saw falls, notably Honduras and Nicaragua, though activists remain in a vulnerable situation.

Civil society groups and internatio­nal institutio­ns are also increasing­ly mobilizing behind environmen­tal rights.

Last month, 116 organizati­ons in the Philippine­s launched a petition declaring: “It is not a crime to defend the environmen­t.”

Campaigner­s for indigenous communitie­s have taken their struggle to global climate talks and the UN.

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