Make Homepage
Advertise
Partners
About Us

 

  Subscribe to the Newsletter
 
 
HOMEPAGE NEWS SECURITY COLUMNISTS OP-ED ARTICLES INTERVIEWS BOOK REVIEWS

Friday, 25 May 2012
Turkey Europe Middle East Caucasus Central Asia Russia Americas Asia Book Store World Economy Energy
Brazil Plans Vast Amazon Reserve

printable version
send your friend
add comment
Friday, 18 February 2005

By Tiago Pariz


BRASILIA, Brazil - Brazil's president has decreed the creation of one of the world's
largest environmental protection areas in the Amazon to combat illegal logging and rising
violence after the killing of a prominent U.S. human rights activist.

President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva on Thursday signed the plan to safeguard the most
threatened area of Brazil's Amazon rain forest after U.S. nun Dorothy Stang, 74, was killed
there on Saturday by gunmen with suspected links to illegal loggers.

The murder of Stang sparked an international outcry to stop death squad activities and
deforestation in the Amazon.

Lula said he would not allow powerful timber mafias to threaten his government. He set
aside an area three times the size of Belgium for conservation and for restricted logging to
block their advance on the world's largest rain forest.

"This is the most important package of measures for the Amazon in Brazil's history," said Nilo
D'Avila, the Amazon coordinator for the environmental group Greenpeace, which was among
dozens of organizations calling for action. "It's very sad a person has to die, a person as
important as Sister Dorothy, for the government to take such a big decision."

The 32,000 square-mile (83,200 square-km) protection area decreed by Lula spans the
states of Para, Mato Grosso and Rondonia on the western side of the BR 163 highway -- an
access route to the forest for illegal loggers and settlers.

Lula banned use of the BR 163 forest protection area for six months until controlled logging
and reserves are set up.

Farther east in Para, the government created conservation areas covering 1,500 square
miles (3,885 square km) -- about the size of the U.S. state of Rhode Island.

One of the reserves, known as the Terra do Meio, is in the Trans-Amazonian highway region
where Stang was gunned down as she defended small farmers at a government settlement
project.

Activists say Amazon violence will escalate unless the government clamps down on loggers
and landowners who use gunmen and militias to control rain forest areas.

CRIME CRACKDOWN

Thousands of landless peasants blocked four highways in southern Para on Thursday to
protest the murder of a union leader and two rural workers since Stang's death.

Few people are punished for such crimes in a region where police and judges are often
accused of being in league with landowners.

Lula has sent federal police and 2,000 jungle-warfare troops into the state to find Stang's
killers and impose law and order in what is considered Brazil's biggest crackdown on rain forest
crime.


Friday, 18 February 2005

Reuters via Swissinfo
   World

Previous News

Brazil Plans Vast Amazon Reserve

Next News

 LATEST NEWS

One Policeman, Three Attackers Killed in Turkey Suicide Bombing

Critics Warn of ‘Oil Curse’ for Uganda

French President Outlines Early Pullout From Afghanistan

Gunmen Attack Bus, Killing 7 in Southern Pakistan

Protests Erupt in Syria, More Government Attacks Reported

 USER COMMENTS

add comment

no comment
   LATEST NEWS FROM WORLD
   MOST VISITED NEWS (DAILY)
Brazil Plans Vast Amazon Reserve Brazil Plans Vast Amazon Reserve Brazil Plans Vast Amazon Reserve Brazil Plans Vast Amazon Reserve 
Journal of Turkish Weekly (JTW)
USAK House,
Ayten Sok. No:21
Mebusevleri, Tandogan, Ankara, Turkey