National Post

wildfires visible from space rage acr oss amazon

Brazil’ s Bolsonaro accuses NGOs of setting fire sin rain forest, critics call claims a‘ smoke screen .’

- Anthony Boadle Eduar Simoes and do

Brazil’s right-wing President Jair Bolsonaro on Wednesday accused non- government­al organizati­ons of setting wildfires in the Amazon rainforest to damage his government’s image after he cut their funding.

Environmen­t and climate experts disputed his unfounded claim as a “smoke screen” to hide the dismantlin­g of protection­s for the world’s largest tropical rainforest and said farmers clearing land were the cause of a surge in forest fires.

“Everything indicates” that NGOS are going to the Amazon to “set fire” to the forest, Bolsonaro said in a Facebook Live broadcast. When asked if he had evidence to back up his claims, he said he had “no written plan,” adding “that’s not how it’s done.”

The former army captain turned politician said the slashing of NGO funding by his government could be a motive.

“Crime exists,” he said. “These people are missing the money.”

Bolsonaro’s latest comments enraged environmen­talists, who are increasing­ly concerned by his attitude toward the Amazon rainforest, a vital bulwark against climate change and to which Brazil is home to more than half.

“This is a sick statement, a pitiful statement,” said Marcio Astrini, Greenpeace Brazil’s public policy coordinato­r. “Increased deforestat­ion and burning are the result of his anti-environmen­tal policy.”

Bolsonaro, a longtime skeptic of environmen­tal concerns, wants to open the Amazon to more agricultur­e and mining, and has told other countries worried about rising deforestat­ion since he took office to mind their own business.

Congressma­n Nilto Tatto, leader of the lower house environmen­t caucus, said Bolsonaro’s “stunning” attack on NGOS was a smoke screen to hide his dismantlin­g of 30 years of Brazilian environmen­tal protection­s.

Bolsonaro on Wednesday said his administra­tion was working to control fires currently raging in the Amazon rainforest, which have reached a record number this year. Brazil’s space research centre, INPE, has detected 72,843 fires so far in 2019.

When asked about the spread of uncontroll­ed fires, Bolsonaro has brushed aside criticism, saying it is the time of the year of the “queimada” or burn, when farmers use fire to clear land.

Climate scientist Carlos Nobre said farmers seeking to clear land for cattle pastures wait for the dry season when forests become combustibl­e and then set them alight. He attributed this year’s spike to illegal deforestat­ion since it has not been unusually dry.

“NGOS working in the Amazon do not use fire in farming. On the contrary, they encourage rural communitie­s to avoid fire,” said Nobre, senior researcher at the Sao Paulo University’s Institute for Advanced Studies.

 ?? TV GLOBO/ Reuters ??
TV GLOBO/ Reuters

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