Aumenta a pressão da mídia estrangeira sobre
Jair Bolsonaro. Em reportagem intitulada "Incêndios na floresta amazônica:
líderes globais instados a desviar o Brasil do caminho do 'suicídio'", o
jornal britânico The Guardian destaca a preocupante devastação da Amazônia e
afirma que "a grande maioria dos brasileiros quer proteger a floresta,
segundo pesquisas de opinião, mas o governo tem priorizado os interesses
comerciais"
247 - Em
reportagem intitulada "Incêndios na floresta amazônica: líderes
globais instados a desviar o Brasil do caminho do 'suicídio'", o jornal
britânico The Guardian destaca a preocupante devastação da Amazônia no governo
Jair Bolsonaro, que sofre cada vez mais pressão da mídia estrangeira. De acordo
com a publicação, "a grande maioria dos brasileiros quer proteger a
floresta, segundo pesquisas de opinião, mas
o governo tem priorizado os
interesses comerciais".
"Bolsonaro
anunciou nesta semana que retomaria os projetos mega-hidrelétricos na Amazônia
que foram interrompidos por motivos ambientais. Seu filho propôs uma lei no
Congresso que enfraqueceria ainda mais as proteções em torno do território
indígena e das reservas naturais", afirma.
"O
Brasil registrou mais de 72.000 incêndios este ano, um aumento de 84% em
relação ao mesmo período de 2018, segundo o INPE. Nem todos eram incêndios
florestais, mas mais da metade estava na Amazônia", reforça o jornal.
A
reprotagem destaca que Bolsonaro "tentou desviar a culpa". "Ele
demitiu o chefe da agência espacial e disse que os dados do satélite eram uma
mentira. Seu chefe de gabinete alegou que as preocupações ambientais européias
eram uma conspiração para restringir o crescimento econômico do Brasil",
continua.
"Seu
ministro das Relações Exteriores twittou que era uma tática da esquerda
internacional. Nesta semana, ele sugeriu, sem evidências, que grupos
ambientalistas poderiam ter dado início aos incêndios para constranger seu
governo. Esta última alegação foi condenada na quinta-feira em uma carta
assinada por 118 organizações da sociedade civil", acrescentou.
Amazon rainforest fires: global leaders urged to divert Brazil from 'suicide' path
Last modified on Fri 23
Aug 2019 18.10 BST, The Guardian (UK) https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2019/aug/23/amazon-fires-global-leaders-urged-divert-brazil-suicide-path?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other
Experts say international pressure may be only way to sway Bolsonaro
government
International pressure may be the
only way to stop the Brazilian government from taking a “suicide” path in the
Amazon, one of the country’s most respected scientists has said, as the world’s
biggest rainforest continues to be ravaged by thousands of deliberate fires.
The large
number of conflagrations – set illegally to clear and prepare land for crops, cattle and
property speculation – has prompted the state of Amazonas to declare an
emergency, created giant smoke clouds that have drifted hundreds of miles, and
sparked international concerns about the destruction of an essential carbon
sink.
On Wednesday, the UK trade minister
Conor Burns was shaking hands with his counterparts in Brasilia and declaring a
desire to “deepen relations”. Asked about the fires, he declined to comment but
reportedly said Bolsonaro’s government had
“legitimate ambitions to bring prosperity to its people”.
Scientists say the ongoing
destruction will have dire consequences for Brazil and the world.
Carlos Nobre, a senior researcher
with the Institute of Advanced Studies at the University of São Paulo, said the
surge in deforestation was taking the rainforest closer to a tipping point
beyond which swaths of the usually humid forest would become a dry savannah,
with dire consequences for the climate, wildlife and forest dwellers.
Nobre said deforestation was on
course to rise by 20-30% this year and was “very likely” to pass 10,000 sq km
for the first time in more than 10 years. The trend has been worsening for
several years, but it has accelerated under Bolsonaro, who has weakened the
environment agency and expressed support for miners, farmers and loggers.
Nobre co-authored a study last year that predicted the
southern, eastern and central regions of the Amazon would reach an irreversible
stage of degradation once 20%-25% of the forest was cleared. This was not
expected for 20-25 years, but Nobre said the tipping point was likely to be
brought forward by about five years if this year’s rate of forest destruction
continued.
Brazil has recorded more than 72,000 fires this year,
an
84% increase on the same period in 2018, according to the INPE. Not all were forest
fires, but more than half were in the Amazon.
In one of the worst affected
municipalities, Porto Velho, environmental activists said there were fires
around the city and the streets were filled with smoke.
“People are scared. The hospitals
are full of people with respiratory diseases. In 60 years, this is the first
time I feel difficulty breathing,” said Ivaneide Bandeira Cardozo, the
coordinator of the environmental organisation Kanindé. “It’s a thousand times worse than
in other years.
“Bad farmers think they can commit
all kinds of illegality because they will suffer no punishment … It seems
Brazil has no law, that all the laws are in tatters.”
In the soya frontier state of Mato
Grosso, which has had more fires than anywhere else in Brazil this year,
burning has been
detected inside
indigenous lands and nature reserves.
Nobre said one of the few remaining
ways to prevent a dangerous loss of forest was through external protests and
consumer actions.
“Politicians in Brazil pay more
attention to international pressure than the voice of Brazilians,” he said. “I
think international pressure is essential to reverse this tragic pathway. The
agriculture sector in Brazil is very concerned that European consumers won’t
buy Brazil produce. This may be the ultimate way to stop the Brazilian
government from a suicide of the Amazon, which will have terrible consequences
for the climate and for Brazil.”
“There have always been some ups and
downs, but the overall trajectory has been towards improvement. Now, Brazil is
headed in the other direction.
“Under normal circumstances, the
outside world would endeavour to help, but this Brazilian government is not
interested in help.”
The scientists said there were
already signs the tipping point was drawing closer. The dry season in the
southern and eastern Amazon was more than 20 days longer than it was 30 years
ago, droughts were more common, and plants that relied on high humidity were
declining. In deforested areas, these trends were more pronounced.
Nobre said: “If the dry season extends
two to three weeks more we will reach a critical moment. If it lasts longer
than four months, this is the climate envelope of a savannah.”
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