"Bolsonaro has overseen the most significant rollback, and full-on assault, on human rights and environmental protection in Brazil since the fall of the country’s military dictatorship."
by Joe Catron | July 1, 2019
As deforestation in Brazil's Amazon rainforest reaches the highest level in a decade, the rainforest's indigenous peoples and their supporters have called for action against the political and business interests they blame for a spike in illegal logging and other resource extraction.
A report released by Amazon Watch as part of its ongoing "Complicity in Destruction" campaign aims not only to spotlight the role of North American and Western European financiers, importers, and traders in the ongoing destruction of the Amazon, but also to mobilize support for a boycott launched by the National Indigenous Mobilization (MNI) against the Brazilian agribusiness and mining interests encroaching on the threatened region. The report says:
The MNI requests solidarity from the international community to support these efforts, which aim to leverage global markets in order to moderate the behavior of the agroindustrial sector, as a means to halt [Brazil President Jair] Bolsonaro's assault, ultimately protecting and restoring environmental safeguards and human rights."Christian Poirier, Amazon Watch's Program Director, told MintPress News that the inauguration of right-wing strongman Jair Bolsonaro as Brazil's president on January 1 lent fresh urgency to the campaign.
"Bolsonaro has overseen the most significant rollback of, and full-on assault on, human rights and environmental protection in Brazil since the fall of the country's military dictatorship and the reinstallation of democracy in 1985," Poirier said, adding:
He's hearkening back to an era of rampant environmental destruction and rights abuses that some would call genocide of indigenous peoples, by attacking socio-environmental policy that is responsible for indigenous land rights, that is responsible for the protection of forests in the country, and he’s doing so at a very rapid pace."Among his first moves as president, Bolsonaro stripped Brazil's National Indian Foundation (FUNAI) of its authority to create new reserves for indigenous nations and transferred control of both it and the country's forest service to its agriculture ministry.
"Human rights abuses and environmental rollbacks"
Satellite data released by INPE, Brazil's space agency, earlier this month showed the clear-cutting of 285 square miles, or 739 square kilometers, of the Amazon in May, the highest level of deforestation in a decade and more than twice the rate two years ago.
Observers cite an escalation in illegal logging and land theft during the Bolsonaro administration, with the first raid on an indigenous reserve occurring December 30, two days before Bolsonaro took office.
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