Environmental activists 'being killed at rate of one a week'
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2012/jun/19/environment-activist-deaths?newsfeed=true
Environmental activists 'being killed at rate of one a week'
Death toll of campaigners involved in protection of forests, rivers and land
has almost doubled in three years
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Email Jonathan Watts in
Rio de Janeiro
guardian.co.uk, Monday 18 June 2012
The
struggle for the world's remaining natural resources is becoming more
murderous, according to a new report that reveals that environmental
activists were killed at the rate of one a week in 2011.
The death
toll of campaigners, community leaders and journalists involved in the
protection of forests, rivers and land has risen dramatically in the past
three years, said Global Witness.
Brazil -- the host of the Rio+20
conference on sustainable development -- has the worst record for danger in a
decade that has seen the deaths of more than 365 defenders, said the
briefing, which was released on the eve of the high-level segment of the
Earth Summit.
The group called on the leaders at Rio to set up
systems to monitor and counter the rising violence, which in many cases
involves governments and foreign corporations, and to reduce the consumption
pressures that are driving development into remote areas.
"This trend
points to the increasingly fierce global battle for resources, and
represents the sharpest of wake-up calls for delegates in Rio," said Billy
Kyte, campaigner at Global Witness.
The group acknowledges that their
results are incomplete and skewed towards certain countries because
information is fragmented and often missing. This means the toll is likely
to be higher than their findings, which did not include deaths related to
cross-border conflicts prompted by competition for natural resources, and
fighting over gas and oil.
Brazil recorded almost half of the
killings worldwide, the majority of which were connected to illegal forest
clearance by loggers and farmers in the Amazon and other remote areas, often
described as the "wild west".
Among the recent high-profile cases
were the murders last year of two high-profile Amazon activists, Jose Claudio Ribeiro da Silva and Maria do Espirito Santo. Such are the risks
that dozens of other activists and informers are now under state protection.
Unlike most countries on the list, however, the number of killings in
Brazil declined slightly last year, perhaps because the government is making
a greater effort to intervene in deforestation cases.
The reverse
trend is apparent in the Philippines, where four activists were killed last
month, prompting the Kalikasan People's Network for Environment to talk of
"bloody May".
Though Brazil, Peru and Colombia have reported high
rates of killing in the past 10 years, this is partly because they are
relatively transparent about the problem thanks to strong civil society
groups, media organisations and church groups -- notably the Catholic Land
Commission in Brazil -- which can monitor such crimes. Under-reporting is
thought likely in China and Central Asia, which have more closed systems,
said the report. The full picture has still to emerge.
Last December,
the UN special rapporteur on human rights noted: "Defenders working on land
and environmental issues in connection with extractive industries and
construction and development projects in the Americas -- face the highest
risk of death as result of their human rights activities."
-- 19 June
2012 update: The number of deaths in Brazil was wrongly cited as 737 -- this
has been corrected to 365. The headline and opening line of this story have
been changed to reflect that.