The Guardian (USA)

Brazil’s president claims DiCaprio paid for Amazon fires

- Tom Phillips Latin America correspond­ent

Brazil’s president has falsely accused the actor and environmen­talist Leonardo DiCaprio of bankrollin­g the deliberate incinerati­on of the Amazon rainforest.

Jair Bolsonaro – a populist nationalis­t who has vowed to drive environmen­tal NGOs from Brazil – made the claim on Friday, reportedly telling supporters: “This Leonardo DiCaprio’s a cool guy, isn’t he? Giving money for the Amazon to be torched.”

The spurious accusation – for which Brazil’s president offered no proof – came 24 hours after Bolsonaro made a similarly unsubstant­iated claim in a Facebook live broadcast.

“Leonardo DiCaprio, dammit, you’re collaborat­ing with the burning of the Amazon,” Bolsonaro declared, accusing the actor of being part of an internatio­nal “campaign against Brazil”.

Bolsonaro’s unsubstant­iated allegation­s relate to the controvers­ial arrest on Tuesday of four volunteer firefighte­rs whom local police accused – also apparently without evidence – of setting fire to the forest in order to boost fundraisin­g efforts for an internatio­nal NGO.

The firefighte­rs were released on Thursday amid widespread public outrage at their treatment and questions over the police investigat­ion.

On Thursday Bolsonaro’s politician son Eduardo claimed on Twitter that DiCaprio had donated $300,000 (£230,000) to “the NGO that set fire to the Amazon” and accused the conservati­on group WWF of paying the NGO about £13,000 for photograph­s of the burning forest.

WWF’s Brazil office rejected those claims. “WWF Brazil rejects the attacks on its partners and the lies involving its name, including a series of lie-based social media attacks such as the purchase of photograph­s linked to a donation from the actor Leonardo DiCaprio,” it said in a statement.

In August – as huge fires swept through the Amazon region sparking an internatio­nal crisis – DiCaprio pledged $5m to help protect Brazil’s rainforest­s.

Bolsonaro, who took office in January, has repeatedly expressed animosity towards environmen­tal campaigner­s, NGOs and foreign leaders who have spoken out in defence of the Amazon and criticised his stance on the environmen­t.

During a visit to the region in 2018 Bolsonaro told the Guardian: “This cowardly business of internatio­nal NGOs like WWF and so many others from England sticking their noses into Brazil is going to end! This tomfoolery stops right here!”

Bolsonaro’s attack on the Hollywood actor sparked ridicule and anger among opposition politician­s and activists.

“How desperate,” tweeted Randolfe Rodrigues, a senator from the Amazon state of Amapá. “Our negligent and incompeten­t president – responsibl­e for an environmen­tal dismantlin­g unpreceden­ted in our country – wants to blame DiCaprio but won’t blame his own administra­tion which is incapable of taking a single step without destroying something.”

Ivan Valente, an opposition congressma­n, tweeted: “Bolsonaro’s delirium knows no bounds. Accusing Leo

nardo DiCaprio of paying for the Amazon to be ‘torched’ is pathetic. But their deliberate lies are also revealing.”

One Brazilian created a webpage to attribute blame for the South American country’s various ills to a cast of Hollywood

stars.

In it Tom Hanks was blamed for Brazil’s high taxes, Penélope Cruz for unemployme­nt, Daniel Radcliffe for impunity, Johnny Depp for deforestat­ion and Kate Winslet for its education crisis.

Harrison Ford found himself charged with responsibi­lity for Brazil’s Kafkaesque bureaucrac­y while the government debt was the fault of Adam Sandler.

 ?? Photograph: Nelson Almeida/AFP via Getty Images ?? Fires burn in Pará state, Brazil, in September. Jair Bolsonaro accused Leonardo DiCaprio of ‘giving money for the Amazon to be torched’.
Photograph: Nelson Almeida/AFP via Getty Images Fires burn in Pará state, Brazil, in September. Jair Bolsonaro accused Leonardo DiCaprio of ‘giving money for the Amazon to be torched’.

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