Sunday Times

Brazil fiddles as Amazon burns

Brazil’s former environmen­t head calls raging wildfires a ‘crime against humanity’, writes Anastasia Moloney

- — Thomson Reuters Foundation

Former Brazilian environmen­t minister and presidenti­al candidate Marina Silva this week called wildfires raging in the Amazon rainforest a “crime against humanity” and blamed current government policies for fuelling the blazes.

A record number of wildfires have raged for weeks and are decimating the Brazilian Amazon, the world’s largest tropical rainforest whose protection scientists say is critical to the fight against climate change.

The blazes have nearly doubled this year compared with the same period in 2018, according to Brazilian officials, prompting a global outcry.

“The whole world is watching a situation that is out of control in terms of deforestat­ion and fires in Brazil’s Amazon,” Silva told a conference in Bogotá, Colombia.

She and other environmen­talists have blamed the Amazon’s plight on cuts to environmen­tal protection under right-wing President Jair Bolsonaro, who took office in January riding a wave of populist support for his anticorrup­tion campaign.

“It’s a situation I regard to be a crime against the homeland, a crime against humanity,” said Silva, a former senator.

“Throughout Brazil’s history we have had difficult situations, but this is the first time we have a situation that was practicall­y and officially fuelled by the government,” she said.

Bolsonaro has railed against environmen­tal fines for farmers and called for indigenous reserves and other protected areas to be opened up for developmen­t. The environmen­t ministry has set up a body with the power to pardon deforester­s.

Federal prosecutor­s in Brazil’s Amazon state of Pará said they would investigat­e the increase in deforestat­ion and wildfires to determine whether there had been reduced monitoring and enforcemen­t of

environmen­tal protection­s.

Environmen­talists like Silva, a minister under former left-wing president Luiz

Inácio Lula da Silva, say Bolsonaro’s push to open the Amazon to developmen­t is emboldenin­g industry, illegal loggers and ranchers to clear land and exploit natural resources.

“The Bolsonaro government has broken down all the environmen­tal policies that were created throughout the decades,” said Silva, who was born into a rubber-tapping community in the Amazon.

Earlier this month Norway and Germany suspended funding for projects to curb deforestat­ion in Brazil after becoming alarmed by rising deforestat­ion under Bolsonaro.

Bolsonaro said this week that the government lacked the resources to fight the wildfires. He also said that while he could not prove that nongovernm­ental groups were lighting the fires, they were “the most likely suspects”. The president said in a Facebook broadcast that countries that gave money to preserve the Amazon did it to “interfere with our sovereignt­y”, and not for charity.

Indigenous groups who live in the Amazon rainforest and depend on it for survival said the wildfires in Brazil and eastern Bolivia were a tragedy. “The lack of capacity of these government­s and their lack of political will have caused the serious environmen­tal tragedy that for weeks, and without precedent, already show irreversib­le environmen­tal damage,” indigenous Amazon organisati­ons said.

South African Kumi Naidoo, secretaryg­eneral of rights group Amnesty Internatio­nal, said responsibi­lity to stop the wildfires “lies squarely” with Brazil’s government, which “must change [its] disastrous policy of opening up the rainforest for destructio­n”.

 ?? Picture: Reuters ?? AMAZON ALIGHT This fire blazing near Humaitá, Amazonas state, Brazil, was just one of thousands raging in the Amazon rainforest this month.
Picture: Reuters AMAZON ALIGHT This fire blazing near Humaitá, Amazonas state, Brazil, was just one of thousands raging in the Amazon rainforest this month.

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