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Brazil sends in troops to protect rainforest

China Daily | Updated: 2020-05-13 09:13

FILE PHOTO: Smoke billows from a fire in an area of the Amazon rainforest near Porto Velho, Rondonia State, Brazil, September 10, 2019. [Photo/Agencies]

BRASILIA-Brazil sent thousands of soldiers to protect the Amazon rainforest on Monday, as the government mounts an early response to surging deforestation ahead of the peak season for forest fires.

The armed forces, alongside environmental officials, police and other government agencies, began with an operation in a national forest in Rondonia state, near the Bolivian border, Vice-President Hamilton Mourao said at a news conference.

The rate of deforestation in Brazil's Amazon soared by 55 percent in the first four months of the year compared with the same period of 2019, according to government data released on Friday.

The destruction hit an 11-year high last year, spurring an outcry that Brazil was not doing enough to protect the world's largest rainforest.

"We don't want to be labeled by the rest of the world as an environmental villain," Mourao said.

President Jair Bolsonaro authorized the deployment, sending in troops three months earlier than in 2019, when Amazon fires grabbed global headlines.

Defense Minister Fernando Azevedo said the armed forces are establishing bases in three Amazon cities, with 3,800 troops mobilized against illegal logging and other crimes, at an initial operational cost of 60 million reais ($10 million).

Azevedo said each base was also assigned five specialists in responding to chemical warfare to help avoid spreading the coronavirus through the operations.

The military's current deployment is for 30 days, to June 10. That could be extended with the approach of the dry season, when forest fires generally spread, and the military will seek to assist in fire prevention, Mourao said.

"We have no doubt this problem will continue to exist," he said. "We don't consider this the best job for the armed forces, to be always engaged in this type of action, but unfortunately it's the means we have to limit these crimes from happening."

The armed forces will continue to be used until environmental agencies, like the main enforcement agency Ibama, increase their staff, Mourao said. An economic downturn and budget restrictions have prevented Ibama from hiring new agents, thinning its ranks.

Environment Minister Ricardo Salles acknowledged that government data pointed to rising deforestation this year. He said that the coronavirus outbreak had "aggravated" the situation, without elaborating.

Salles said he was confident the government's actions under Mourao's direction would succeed in lowering deforestation from the elevated levels seen in the past two years.

Agencies Via Xinhua

 

 

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