The Borneo Post

Hundreds of new fires in Brazil as outrage over Amazon grows

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PORTO VELHO, Brazil: Brazil yesterday deployed two Hercules C-130 aircraft to douse fires devouring parts of the Amazon rainforest, as hundreds of new blazes were ignited ahead of nationwide protests over the destructio­n.

Heavy smoke covered the city of Porto Velho in the northweste­rn state of Rondonia where the defense ministry said the planes have started dumping thousands of liters of water, amid a global uproar over the worst fires in years.

Swathes of the remote region bordering Bolivia have been scorched by the blazes, sending thick smoke billowing into the sky and increasing air pollution across the world’s largest rainforest.

Experts say increased land clearing during the monthslong dry season to make way for crops or grazing has aggravated the problem this year.

“It gets worse every year – this year, the smoke has been really serious,” Deliana Amorim, 46, told AFP in Porto Velho where half a million people live.

“I’m very worried because of the environmen­t and health. I have a daughter with respirator­y problems and she suffers more because of the fires.”

At

I’m very worried because of the environmen­t and health. I have a daughter with respirator­y problems and she suffers more because of the fires.

Deliana Amorim

least seven states, including Rondonia, have requested the army’s help in the Amazon, where more than 43,000 troops are based and available to combat fires, officials said.

The fires have triggered a global outcry and are a major topic of concern at the G7 meeting in Biarritz in southern France.

World leaders at the summit have agreed to help the countries affected by the fires “as fast as possible,” French President Emmanuel Macron said yesterday.

His remarks come amid an escalating war of words with his Brazilian counterpar­t Jair Bolsonaro, who he has accused of lying over Brazil’s stance on climate change.

Bolsonaro has denounced what he calls Macron’s “colonialis­t mentality.”

The fires threaten to torpedo a huge trade agreement between the European Union and South American countries, including Brazil, that took 20 years to negotiate.

Pope Francis yesterday also voiced concern for the rainforest, which he described as a “vital” lung for the planet.

“We are concerned about the vast fires that have developed in the Amazon,” the pope told the faithful at the Vatican.

“That forest lung is vital for our planet.”

He urged the world’s 1.3 billion Catholics to pray for the fires to be extinguish­ed as quickly as possible.

The latest official figures show 79,513 forest fires have been recorded in Brazil this year, the highest number of any year since 2013. More than half of the fires are in the massive Amazon basin, where more than 20 million people live.

Some 1,130 new fires were ignited between Friday and Saturday, according to Brazil’s National Institute for Space Research (INPE).

The new data come as protesters plan to take to the streets across Brazil on Sunday, after thousands held demonstrat­ions in the country and in Europe on Friday. — AFP

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? A tract of Amazon jungle burns in Boca do Acre, Amazonas state, Brazil.
— Reuters photo A tract of Amazon jungle burns in Boca do Acre, Amazonas state, Brazil.

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