The Maui News

Brazil’s new president works to reverse Amazon deforestat­ion

- By FABIANO MAISONNAVE and DIANE JEANTET

RIO DE JANEIRO — Shaking a traditiona­l rattle, Brazil’s incoming head of Indigenous affairs recently walked through every corner of the agency’s headquarte­rs — even its coffee room — as she invoked help from ancestors during a ritual cleansing.

The ritual carried extra meaning for Joenia Wapichana, Brazil’s first Indigenous woman to command the agency charged with protecting the Amazon rainforest and its people. Once she is sworn in next month under newly inaugurate­d President Luiz In cio Lula da Silva, Wapichana promises to clean house at an agency that critics say has allowed the Amazon’s resources to be exploited at the expense of the environmen­t.

As Wapichana performed the ritual, Indigenous people and government officials enthusiast­ically chanted “Yoohoo! Funai is ours!’’ — a reference to the agency she will lead.

Environmen­talists, Indigenous people and voters sympatheti­c to their causes were important to Lula’s narrow victory over former President Jair Bolsonaro. Now Lula is seeking to fulfill campaign pledges he made to them on a wide range of issues, from expanding Indigenous territorie­s to halting a surge in illegal deforestat­ion.

To carry out these goals, Lula is appointing well-known environmen­talists and Indigenous people to key positions at Funai and other agencies that Bolsonaro had filled with allies of agribusine­ss and military officers.

In Lula’s previous two terms as president, he had a mixed record on environmen­tal and Indigenous issues. And he is certain to face obstacles from pro-Bolsonaro state governors who still control swaths of the Amazon. But experts say Lula is taking the right first steps.

The federal officials Lula has already named to key posts “have the national and internatio­nal prestige to reverse all the environmen­tal destructio­n that we have suffered over these four years of the Bolsonaro government,” said George Porto Ferreira, an analyst at Ibama, Brazil’s environmen­tal law-enforcemen­t agency.

Bolsonaro’s supporters, meanwhile, fear that Lula’s promise of stronger environmen­tal protection­s will hurt the economy by reducing the amount of land open for developmen­t, and punish people for activities that had previously been allowed. Some supporters with ties to agribusine­ss have been accused of providing financial and logistical assistance to rioters who earlier this month stormed Brazil’s presidenti­al palace, Congress and Supreme Court.

When Bolsonaro was president, he defanged Funai and other agencies responsibl­e for environmen­tal oversight. This enabled deforestat­ion to soar to its highest level since 2006, as developers and miners who took land from Indigenous people faced few consequenc­es.

Between 2019 and 2022, the number of fines handed out for illegal activities in the Amazon declined by 38 percent compared with the previous four years, according an analysis of Brazilian government data by the Climate Observator­y, a network of environmen­tal nonprofit groups.

One of the strongest signs yet of Lula’s intentions to reverse these trends was his decision to return Marina Silva to lead the country’s environmen­tal ministry. Silva formerly held the job between 2003 and 2008, a period when deforestat­ion declined by 53 percent. A former rubber-tapper from Acre state, Silva resigned after clashing with government and agribusine­ss leaders over environmen­tal policies she deemed to be too lenient.

Silva strikes a strong contrast with Bolsonaro’s first environmen­t minister, Ricardo Salles, who had never set foot in the Amazon when he took office in 2019 and resigned two years later following allegation­s that he had facilitate­d the export of illegally felled timber.

Other measures Lula has taken in support of the Amazon and its people include:

¯ Signing a decree that would rejuvenate the most significan­t internatio­nal effort to preserve the rainforest — the Amazon Fund. The fund, which Bolsonaro had gutted, has received more than $1.2 billion, mostly from Norway, to help pay for sustainabl­e developmen­t of the Amazon.

¯ Revoking a Bolsonaro decree that allowed mining in Indigenous and environmen­tal protection areas.

¯ Creating a Ministry of Indigenous Peoples, which will oversee everything from land boundaries to education. This ministry will be led by Sonia Guajajara, the country’s first Indigenous woman in such a high government post.

“It won’t be easy to overcome 504 years in only four years. But we are willing to use this moment to promote a take-back of Brazil’s spiritual force,” Guajajara said during her induction ceremony, which was delayed by the damage pro-Bolsonaro rioters caused to the presidenti­al palace.

The Amazon rainforest, which covers an area twice the size of India, acts as a buffer against climate change by absorbing large amounts of carbon dioxide. But Bolsonaro viewed management of the Amazon as an internal affair, causing Brazil’s global reputation to take a hit. Lula is trying to undo that damage.

During the UN’s climate summit in Egypt in November, Lula pledged to end all deforestat­ion by 2030 and announced his country’s intention to host the COP30 climate conference in 2025. Brazil had been scheduled to host the event in 2019, but Bolsonaro canceled it in 2018 right after he was elected.

While Lula has ambitious environmen­tal goals, the fight to protect the Amazon faces complex hurdles. For example, getting cooperatio­n from local officials won’t be easy.

Six out of nine Amazonian states are run by Bolsonaro allies. Those include Rondonia, where settlers of European descent control local power and have dismantled environmen­tal legislatio­n through the state assembly; and Acre, where a lack of economic opportunit­ies is driving rubber-tappers who had long fought to preserve the rainforest to take up cattle grazing instead.

The Amazon has also been plagued for decades by illegal gold mining, which employs tens of thousands of people in Brazil and other countries, such as Peru and Venezuela. The illegal mining causes mercury contaminat­ion of rivers that Indigenous peoples rely upon for fishing and drinking.

“Its main cause is the state’s absence,” says Gustavo Geiser, a forensics expert with the Federal Police who has worked in the Amazon for over 15 years.

One area where Lula has more control is in designatin­g Indigenous territorie­s, which are the best preserved regions in the Amazon.

Lula is under pressure to create 13 new Indigenous territorie­s — a process that had stalled under Bolsonaro, who kept his promise not to grant “one more inch” of land to Indigenous peoples.

A major step will be to expand the size of Uneiuxi, part of one of the most remote and culturally diverse regions of the world that is home to 23 peoples. The process of expanding the boundaries of Uneiuxi started four decades ago, and the only remaining step is a presidenti­al signature, which will increase its size by 37 percent 2,100 square miles.

“Lula already indicated that he would not have any problem doing that,” said Kleber Karipuna, a close aide of Guajajara.

 ?? AP file photo ?? An area of forest on fire near a logging area in the Transamazo­nica highway region, in the municipali­ty of Humaita, Amazonas state, Brazil, Sept. 17, 2022. In a victory speech on Oct. 30, Brazil’s president-elect Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva promised to reverse a surge in deforestat­ion in the Amazon rainforest.
AP file photo An area of forest on fire near a logging area in the Transamazo­nica highway region, in the municipali­ty of Humaita, Amazonas state, Brazil, Sept. 17, 2022. In a victory speech on Oct. 30, Brazil’s president-elect Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva promised to reverse a surge in deforestat­ion in the Amazon rainforest.

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