Bangkok Post

Bolsonaro to face lawsuit over Amazon

1st case to link death to deforestat­ion

- THE HAGUE:

Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro was accused of “crimes against humanity” yesterday at the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) for his alleged role in the destructio­n of the Amazon, the first case seeking to explicitly link deforestat­ion to loss of life.

Planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions from burning and industrial-scale agricultur­e in the Amazon are higher than the total annual emissions of Italy or Spain. Deforestat­ion in the region already releases more carbon dioxide (CO²) than the rest of the Amazon can absorb.

Austrian environmen­tal justice campaigner­s Allrise filed the official complaint at The Hague-based court yesterday morning. They asked for legal proceeding­s against Mr Bolsonaro and his administra­tion for actions “directly connected to the negative impacts of climate change around the world”.

The complaint accuses the Brazilian leader of waging a widespread campaign resulting in the murder of environmen­tal defenders and of endangerin­g the global population through emissions caused by deforestat­ion.

It harnesses the growing field of climate attributio­n science, which allows researcher­s to prove a link between extreme weather events, on the one hand, and global heating and environmen­tal degradatio­n, on the other.

The team behind it said that Mr Bolsonaro’s administra­tion had sought to “systematic­ally remove, neuter, and eviscerate laws, agencies and individual­s that serve to protect the Amazon”.

It said that Mr Bolsonaro was responsibl­e for approximat­ely 4,000 square kilometres of lost rainforest each year, and that he had presided over monthly deforestat­ion rates that had accelerate­d by up to 88% since taking office on Jan 1, 2019.

Mr Bolsonaro’s office did not respond to a request for comment.

The team of experts estimated that emissions attributab­le to the Bolsonaro administra­tion due to rampant deforestat­ion will cause over 180,000 excess heat-related deaths globally this century.

“In the last few years, climate science has come a long way in being able to provide evidence of specific causal relationsh­ips between emissions of greenhouse gases and the consequenc­es that arrive globally as a

result,” Rupert Stuart Smith, from the University of Oxford’s Sustainabl­e Law Programme, said.

While there have been at least three other complaints by indigenous groups against Mr Bolsonaro at the ICC since 2016, organisers say this one is the first to highlight the clear link between forest loss and global human health.

“What’s happening in Brazil — mass deforestat­ion — we want to understand the causal link to the global climate,”

AllRise founder Johannes Wesemann said.

“It is exactly what the Rome Statute defines as a crime against humanity: the intentiona­l destructio­n of the environmen­t and environmen­tal defenders.”

The point of the complaint was “not to speak on behalf of any Brazilian, but rather to show the global gravity of mass deforestat­ion”, said Mr Wesemann.

 ?? REUTERS ?? An aerial view shows a deforested plot of Brazilian Amazon rainforest, in Apui, Amazonas state on Sept 4.
REUTERS An aerial view shows a deforested plot of Brazilian Amazon rainforest, in Apui, Amazonas state on Sept 4.

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