The Day

Global worry over Amazon fires escalates, but Brazil defiant

- By MARCELO SILVA de SOUSA

Rio de Janeiro — Amid global concern about raging fires in the Amazon, Brazil’s government complained Thursday that it is being targeted in smear campaign by critics who contend President Jair Bolsonaro is not doing enough to curb widespread deforestat­ion.

The threat to what some call “the lungs of the planet” has ignited a bitter dispute about who is to blame during the tenure of a leader who has described Brazil’s rainforest protection­s as an obstacle to economic developmen­t and who traded Twitter jabs on Thursday with France’s president over the fires.

French President Emmanuel Macron called the wildfires an internatio­nal crisis and said the leaders of the Group of 7 nations should hold urgent discussion­s about them at their summit in France this weekend.

“Our house is burning. Literally. The Amazon rain forest — the lungs which produces 20% of our planet’s oxygen — is on fire,” Macron tweeted.

Bolsonaro fired back with his own tweet: “I regret that Macron seeks to make personal political gains in an internal matter for Brazil and other Amazonian countries. The sensationa­list tone he used does nothing to solve the problem.”

Onyx Lorenzoni, the president’s chief of staff, earlier in the day accused European countries of exaggerati­ng environmen­tal problems in Brazil in order to disrupt its commercial interests.

“There is deforestat­ion in Brazil, yes, but not at the rate and level that they say,” said Lorenzoni, according to the Brazilian news website globo. com.

His allegation came after Germany and Norway, citing Brazil’s apparent lack of commitment to fighting deforestat­ion, decided to withhold more than $60 million in funds earmarked for sustainabi­lity projects in Brazilian forests.

The debate came as Brazilian federal experts reported a record number of wildfires across the country this year, up 84 percent over the same period in 2018. Satellite images show smoke from the Amazon reaching across the Latin American continent to the Atlantic coast and Sao Paulo, Brazil’s biggest city, according to the World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on.

U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres tweeted: “In the midst of the global climate crisis, we cannot afford more damage to a major source of oxygen and biodiversi­ty. The Amazon must be protected.”

Federal prosecutor­s in Brazil’s Amazon region launched investigat­ions of increasing deforestat­ion, according to local media. Prosecutor­s said they plan to probe possible negligence by the national government in the enforcemen­t of environmen­tal codes.

Bolivia is also struggling to contain big fires, many believed to have been set by farmers clearing land for cultivatio­n.

Bolsonaro said there was a “very strong” indication that some non-government­al groups could be setting blazes in retaliatio­n for losing state funds under his administra­tion. He did not provide any evidence.

Bolsonaro, who won election last year, also accused media organizati­ons of exploiting the fires to undermine his government.

“Most of the media wants Brazil to end up like Venezuela,” he said, referring to political and economic turbulence in the neighborin­g South American country.

London-based Amnesty Internatio­nal blamed the Brazilian government for the fires, which have escalated internatio­nal concern over the vast rainforest that is a major absorber of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

The rights group this year documented illegal land invasions and arson attacks near indigenous territorie­s in the Amazon, including Rondonia state, where many fires are raging, said Kumi Naidoo, Amnesty’s secretary general.

“Instead of spreading outrageous lies or denying the scale of deforestat­ion taking place, we urge the president to take immediate action to halt the progress of these fires,” Naidoo said.

The WWF conservati­on group also challenged Bolsonaro’s allegation­s about NGOs, saying they divert “the focus of attention from what really matters: the well-being of nature and the people of the Amazon.”

Brazil contains about 60 percent of the Amazon rainforest, whose degradatio­n could have severe consequenc­es for global climate and rainfall. Bolsonaro, who has said he wants to convert land for cattle pastures and soybean farms, won office after channeling outrage over the corruption scandals of the former government.

Filipe Martins, an adviser to Bolsonaro, said on Twitter that the Brazilian government is committed to fighting illegal deforestat­ion and that many other countries are causing environmen­tal damage.

The Amazon will be saved by Brazil and not “the empty, hysterical and misleading rhetoric of the mainstream media, transnatio­nal bureaucrat­s and NGOs,” Martins said.

Sergio Bergman, Argentina’s environmen­t minister, appealed for people to overcome political or ideologica­l divisions to protect the environmen­t. He spoke at a fiveday U.N. workshop on climate change in Brazil’s northern state of Bahia.

“We all, in a way, understand that it is not possible to keep using natural resources without limits,” Bergman said.

 ?? CORPO DE BOMBEIROS DE MATO GROSSO VIA AP ?? In this Aug. 20, 2019 drone photo, brush fires burn in Guaranta do Norte municipali­ty, Mato Grosso state, Brazil.
CORPO DE BOMBEIROS DE MATO GROSSO VIA AP In this Aug. 20, 2019 drone photo, brush fires burn in Guaranta do Norte municipali­ty, Mato Grosso state, Brazil.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States