In just two months, fire has consumed over 45 percent of the Amazon
rainforest in the Arariboia Indigenous Land -- an area of protected
forest that is home to thousands of people. And despite their efforts,
the fire continues to rage out of control.
What’s worse, this no act of nature. The Indigenous Peoples of this area, the Guajajara, claim that the fires are caused by loggers in retaliation for the Guajajara’s work to combat their illegal logging activities. The Guajajara monitor and patrol their lands to ensure that illegal logging doesn’t take place, and have managed to reduce illegal logging in the Arariboia territory. But now they are facing serious reprisals.
Map with hot spots until 08/19/2015 to 10/19/2015 detected by the NPP-VIIRS satellite sensor (Source: http://www.inpe.br/queimadas)
Indigenous concentrated at the entrance of the Ministry of the Environment. © Alan Azevedo / Greenpeace
What’s worse, this no act of nature. The Indigenous Peoples of this area, the Guajajara, claim that the fires are caused by loggers in retaliation for the Guajajara’s work to combat their illegal logging activities. The Guajajara monitor and patrol their lands to ensure that illegal logging doesn’t take place, and have managed to reduce illegal logging in the Arariboia territory. But now they are facing serious reprisals.
Map with hot spots until 08/19/2015 to 10/19/2015 detected by the NPP-VIIRS satellite sensor (Source: http://www.inpe.br/queimadas)
The scale of the flames
The forest fire are shaping up to be one of the largest in
the history of Brazil. It has already consumed about 190,000 of the
413,000 hectares that make up Arariboia; that’s larger than the entire
area of Rio de Janeiro.
Last week the fire grew to gigantic proportions,
registering an average of 560 new hot spots every day. The line of fire
is over 100 km long.
And this fire could lead to more fire in the future.
Because fires like this deeply damage the rainforest and lower the
humidity of the area, they actually increase the chance for future
naturally-caused fires later.
What’s (not) being done
This fire is gigantic, but up until a couple weeks ago, the
Guajajara were fighting it with hardly any resources from the Brazilian
government. A team of thirty Indigenous firefighters were working day
and night without the backup they needed.
Indigenous leaders of the Guajajara people sought to change
this. Earlier this month, they protested outside government offices,
denouncing the government’s apparent indifference to the fire and
drawing attention to the issue. It wasn’t until government inspectors
who worked in fire fighting were attacked by an armed group within
Arariboia Indigenous Land the government began taking Guajajara requests
for help more seriously.
The government’s slow reaction has come with heavy costs. When the
Guajajara protest took place, 25 percent of Arariboia had been impacted
by fires. Today, just over two weeks later, the impact area already
accounts for 45 percent of the territory.Indigenous concentrated at the entrance of the Ministry of the Environment. © Alan Azevedo / Greenpeace
Not an isolated incident
Illegal logging
in Indigenous lands is happening all over Brazil. And as Indigenous
Peoples take measures to stop it, retaliation -- like violence or
starting fires in the forest -- grows.
In early September, Greenpeace Brazil was working with the Ka'apor people
to support the independent monitoring of their territory using the
latest technology as well as traditional methods. During that time,
local reports indicated that loggers set fire to the edges of Indigenous
lands and that some villages were already surrounded by flames.
What can be done
There’s no doubt that the government of Brazil must do more
to protect Indigenous Lands and the people living there from illegal
loggers. They must also provide more support for fighting fires to
Indigenous Peoples.
But the global community must also pay attention. Illegal
timber from Indigenous Lands like Arariboia makes it to the
international timber market
all the time -- fueling the violence and retaliation that led to these
forest fires. It is the responsibility of the international buyers of
Amazon wood to ensure their supply chains aren’t connected to illegal
logging. Only when illegal timber is too risky or no longer lucrative
will it finally be extinguished.
Luana Lila is an Amazon Communications Officer at Greenpeace Brazil.
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