The Manila Times

Brazil president calls NGOs ‘cancer’

-

RIO DE JANEIRO: Brazil’s President Jair Bolsonaro has slammed environmen­tal nongovernm­ent organizati­ons (NGOs) as a “cancer” and denounced what he said was an internatio­nal conspiracy accusing him of being responsibl­e for devastatin­g Amazon wildfires.

“You know that NGOs don’t have a voice with me. I am firm with these people, but I can’t kill this cancer that most NGOs are,” Mr. Bolsonaro said during his regular Facebook broadcast on Thursday.

The farright leader used the broadcast to hit out at “bastards” who accuse him of “setting fire to the Amazon.”

The main target of his ire was a group of environmen­tal NGOs which this week launched an Englishlan­guage internet campaign entitled “Defundbols­onaro.org”, urging potential investors in Brazil to insist on firm government commitment­s to the protection of the Amazon.

“Bolsonaro is burning the Amazon. Again. Which side are you on?” the campaign headline asks.

“Because of him the Amazon, Earth’s main biodiversi­ty hub, and the Indigenous nations who protect it, are in critical condition. Bolsonaro is suffocatin­g our hope for a livable planet,” according to the NGOs.

Internatio­nal investment funds worth a combined $4 trillion called in June for changes to the government’s environmen­tal policy.

Human Rights Watch responded on Friday to Mr. Bolsonaro’s outburst, saying that “not only does he show his total disregard for the actions of NGOs....but his antienviro­nmental policies have accelerate­d the destructio­n of the forest, with serious consequenc­es for those who defend it, but also for the health of thousands of people who breathe toxic air as a result of the fires.”

General Augusto Heleno, Brazil’s Minister of Institutio­nal Security, acknowledg­ed in an interview on Friday that it was possible to “improve” government action to preserve the Amazon, but he also criticized NGOs.

“The favorite sport of some NGOs is to speak badly of the Amazon. Behind it all there are interests that go far beyond preservati­on,” he told the Estado de Sao Paulo newspaper.

“It seems Bolsonaro is responsibl­e for everything that happens in the Amazon, but a lot of the informatio­n in these campaigns is fabricated and illintenti­oned.”

Under internatio­nal pressure, Mr. Bolsonaro has deployed the army to the region to crack down on deforestat­ion and fires and decreed a ban on all agricultur­al burning.

However, satellite images from Brazil’s National Institute for Space Research identified more than 29,000 fires in the region in August, the second highest number in a decade.

The figure represents only 5 percent fewer fires than in 2019, when devastatin­g wildfires triggered worldwide alarm over a forest seen as vital to curbing climate change.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines