The Guardian (USA)

Colombian Amazon deforestat­ion surges as armed groups tighten grip

- Luke Taylor

Deforestat­ion in the Colombian Amazon is surging and could be at a historic peak as armed groups use the rainforest as a bargaining chip in peace negotiatio­ns with the government.

Preliminar­y data shows that deforestat­ion in the region was 40% higher in the first three months of this year than in 2023 as armed groups tightened their control over the rainforest, said Susana Muhamad, the country’s environmen­t minister.

“We are seeing an upward trend that is quite worrying and this has two main reasons,” Muhamad told a press conference in Bogotá. “The first is the very significan­t coercion [of local people] by armed groups in the area, and the second is obviously the favourable conditions [for fires] that have to do with the El Niño phenomenon.”

Colombia has been turning the tide on runaway deforestat­ion in recent years after a 2016 peace accord with the country’s largest guerrilla group left forests unprotecte­d.

Without the Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia (Farc) policing the jungle, a record 219,973 hectares (544,000 acres) were lost in 2017.

Gustavo Petro’s government – the first leftwing administra­tion in the country’s history – has rapidly reversed the trend by negotiatin­g with the armed rebels who have filled the Farc’s power vacuum.

Deforestat­ion across Colombia plummeted 29% from 2021 to 2022 to reach the lowest level since 2013, and preliminar­y data suggests it dropped another 25%-35% in 2023, the environmen­t ministry said.

That trend has come to an end, however.

The unpreceden­ted drop in deforestat­ion was largely due to the order of the Estado Mayor Central (EMC), a group of dissident rebels who dominate vast swathes of Colombia’s forests in the south of the country. The EMC banned forest clearing in 2022 to get a seat at the negotiatin­g table with Petro’s government.

But as those talks became strained last year, the armed rebels revoked the ban. Rather than protecting the Amazon the EMC is now allowing land grabbers to lay waste to the forests in order to show the government who controls the region and extract more favourable negotiatin­g terms.

“The environmen­t has become a bargaining chip,” said Angelica Rojas, a liaison officer for the Guaviare department at the Foundation for Conservati­on and Sustainabl­e Developmen­t (FCDS), a Colombian environmen­tal thinktank.

Deforestat­ion in the Colombian Amazon was 41% higher in the last three months of 2023 than it was the previous year, reaching 18,400 hectares. The concerning trend has continued this year, with 40% higher forest loss in the first three months of 2024, prelim

inary government figures show.

“We expected that deforestat­ion would rise, but not [at] the levels that it is rising,” Muhamad said.

The hotspots were the Meta, Caquetá and Guaviare department­s – EMC stronghold­s and key battlegrou­nds in Colombia’s fight to save the rainforest.

“It’s supremely worrying. People forget that it is not a count of this year’s deforestat­ion in isolation,” said Rodrigo Botero, the director of FCDS. “The damage is cumulative and in the last six years we have now lost more than half a million hectares of forest. We are at a point of no return.”

Particular­ly alarming was the encroachme­nt of cattle farming and coca production on some of the most remote, biodiverse and delicate ecosystems in the world, Botero added. “They are reaching zones such as the Guiana Shield that are infinitely more important in terms of biodiversi­ty and which will take centuries to recover.”

As well as revoking its ban on deforestat­ion, the EMC were playing a “psychologi­cal game” with local communitie­s to control them, Muhamad said.

In recent months armed rebels have displaced local people, killed environmen­tal activists and expelled government officials from the region.

The EMC’s tightening grip has forced the government to halt projects intended to protect the forest such as ecotourism initiative­s and a payment scheme for farmers who preserve the forest.

“Nature is being put in the middle of the conflict,” Muhamad said.

The El Niño weather phenomenon, which typically causes less rainfall in the Amazon, was also facilitati­ng fires in the region, the minister said. South America has experience­d extreme droughts and record temperatur­es this year.

 ?? ?? Deforestat­ion and the destructio­n of habitats in Amazon, Colombia, as seen in March 2023. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
Deforestat­ion and the destructio­n of habitats in Amazon, Colombia, as seen in March 2023. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States