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Rights group says Bolsonaro gives ‘green light’ to Amazon illegal loggers

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Human Rights Watch on Tuesday accused Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro of giving a "green light" to illegal loggers to destroy the Amazon and failing to protect those defending the world's largest rain forest.

Bolsonaro, whose anti-environment rhetoric and policies have been widely blamed for a spike in fires and land clearing in the Amazon this year, has promised to open up the remote region to more development even as he faces growing international criticism.

Official figures show Amazon deforestation nearly doubled in the first eight months of this year, compared with the same period in 2018, to 6,404 square kilometers (2,472 square miles) -- more than twice the size of Luxembourg.

The acceleration in deforestation has been blamed for the sharp increase in fires this year, which official figures show have reached nearly 124,000, as land is cleared and burned to make way for cattle grazing or crops.

A decrease in precipitation and a recent heat wave together with strong winds are also factors in the blazes.

"Through his words and actions, President Jair Bolsonaro has effectively given a green light to criminal groups that are destroying the Amazon and he has put defenders of the forest at serious risk," said Daniel Wilkinson, managing director of HRW's Americas division, at the Sao Paulo launch of a report on illegal logging in the Amazon.

Criminal networks are able to coordinate the extraction, processing and sale of timber "on a large scale," and employ gunmen to intimidate or even execute those trying to stop them, the report said.

Firefighters battle a blaze in the Amazon basin in Mato Grosso state  Brazil  on August 26  2019
Firefighters battle a blaze in the Amazon basin in Mato Grosso state, Brazil, on August 26, 2019
Mayke TOSCANO, Mato Grosso State Communication Department/AFP

Brazil is one of the deadliest countries in the world for land and environmental activists.

It ranked fourth in 2018 with 20 deaths, Global Witness said in July.

"Those responsible for the violence are rarely brought to justice," said the HRW report. In many cases, reports of death threats are not even investigated by police.

Far-right Bolsonaro, who was released from hospital Monday after another operation on his stomach following his stabbing at a campaign rally last year, has rejected Europe-led criticism of his environmental policies.

He is expected to address the UN General Assembly next week on the huge fires in the Amazon.

Human Rights Watch on Tuesday accused Brazil’s President Jair Bolsonaro of giving a “green light” to illegal loggers to destroy the Amazon and failing to protect those defending the world’s largest rain forest.

Bolsonaro, whose anti-environment rhetoric and policies have been widely blamed for a spike in fires and land clearing in the Amazon this year, has promised to open up the remote region to more development even as he faces growing international criticism.

Official figures show Amazon deforestation nearly doubled in the first eight months of this year, compared with the same period in 2018, to 6,404 square kilometers (2,472 square miles) — more than twice the size of Luxembourg.

The acceleration in deforestation has been blamed for the sharp increase in fires this year, which official figures show have reached nearly 124,000, as land is cleared and burned to make way for cattle grazing or crops.

A decrease in precipitation and a recent heat wave together with strong winds are also factors in the blazes.

“Through his words and actions, President Jair Bolsonaro has effectively given a green light to criminal groups that are destroying the Amazon and he has put defenders of the forest at serious risk,” said Daniel Wilkinson, managing director of HRW’s Americas division, at the Sao Paulo launch of a report on illegal logging in the Amazon.

Criminal networks are able to coordinate the extraction, processing and sale of timber “on a large scale,” and employ gunmen to intimidate or even execute those trying to stop them, the report said.

Firefighters battle a blaze in the Amazon basin in Mato Grosso state  Brazil  on August 26  2019

Firefighters battle a blaze in the Amazon basin in Mato Grosso state, Brazil, on August 26, 2019
Mayke TOSCANO, Mato Grosso State Communication Department/AFP

Brazil is one of the deadliest countries in the world for land and environmental activists.

It ranked fourth in 2018 with 20 deaths, Global Witness said in July.

“Those responsible for the violence are rarely brought to justice,” said the HRW report. In many cases, reports of death threats are not even investigated by police.

Far-right Bolsonaro, who was released from hospital Monday after another operation on his stomach following his stabbing at a campaign rally last year, has rejected Europe-led criticism of his environmental policies.

He is expected to address the UN General Assembly next week on the huge fires in the Amazon.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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