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BIODIVERSITY: The Amazon Is Not Eternal
By Stephen Leahy*
PARIS - The Amazon jungle "is very close to a tipping point," and if destruction continues, it could shrink to one third of its original size in just 65 years, warns Thomas Lovejoy, world-renowned tropical biologist.
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BRAZIL: Development Bank Funds Destructive Projects, Say Activists
By Mario Osava
RIO DE JANEIRO - Public money in Brazil is being used by the state development bank to finance deforestation projects and others that trample rights, concentrate wealth, and encourage "imperialist" expansion of large national companies, according to activists at a three-day meeting in this southeastern city.
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ENVIRONMENT: Listen to the Earth, Say Indigenous Peoples
By Valentina Martínez Valdés*
MÉRIDA, Mexico - The idea of wilderness is "an interesting concept; it is a Western concept. Our people have always lived and interacted in the environment," said Illion Merculieff, an environmental activist from the Aleut community in the north-western U.S. state of Alaska.
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CLIMATE CHANGE: Brazil to Recover Leadership Role with CO2 Limits
By Mario Osava
RIO DE JANEIRO - Brazil's decision to adopt voluntary reduction targets for greenhouse gas emissions is an indication that the planet's climate change emergency has joined strategic, economic and ideological issues as a new factor on the global political agenda.
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BRAZIL: Deforestation Down 45 Percent
By Mario Osava
RIO DE JANEIRO - Deforestation in Brazil's Amazon jungle was reduced more than expected between August 2008 and July 2009 - 45 percent compared to the previous 12 months, the National Institute for Space Research (INPE) reported.
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BOLIVIA: Amazon Nuts at Exploitative Prices
By Franz Chávez*
LA PAZ - Bolivia is the world's leading exporter of the shelled Brazil nut, a nutritious food source that grows abundantly in the country's Amazon rainforest region. But in this tropical paradise, many of the nut-gatherers live in hellish conditions.
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PERU: Former Minister Should Answer for Massacre in the Amazon
By Ángel Páez
LIMA - "Did I have a feather on my head and kill the policemen myself?" Mercedes Cabanillas responded when journalists asked her if, as interior minister of Peru, she assumed responsibility for the operation that led to the deaths of 24 members of the police and at least nine indigenous protesters near the Amazon jungle town of Bagua.
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RIGHTS-BRAZIL: Controversy Surrounds Army Search for Guerrilla Remains
By Fabiana Frayssinet
RIO DE JANEIRO - The armed forces of Brazil will begin to search for the remains of guerrilla fighters who were forcibly disappeared in Araguaia, a remote area in the northern jungle state of Pará during the 1964-1985 military dictatorship, reviving an old debate on the role played by the army in that area.
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PERU: Three Days of Anti-Government Protests
By Ángel Páez
LIMA - Wednesday was the second day of a three-day strike declared by trade unions and social movements in Peru to protest the economic policies of President Alan García.
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PERU: Petroleum Sullies the Amazon
By Milagros Salazar*
BAGUA, Peru - "Now the fish are going to disappear," said Luis Umpunchi, an Awajún Indian, one of about 20 people gathered around a broken oil pipeline in the Jayais community, in the northern Peruvian province of Amazonas.
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PERU: Minister Tried to Promote Police Investigated for Massacre
By Ángel Páez
LIMA - Peru’s Interior Minister Mercedes Cabanillas attempted to promote 11 police officials for their performance in the brutal Jun. 5 crackdown on native protests against government decrees that opened up indigenous land in the Amazon jungle to oil, mining, logging and agribusiness companies.
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PERU: Govt Partly Backs Down in Standoff with Native Groups
By Ángel Páez*
LIMA - The Peruvian Congress repealed Thursday two of the most controversial decrees that sparked protests by indigenous groups which ended in bloodshed early this month.
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PERU: Congress Probes Massacre; Prime Minister to Quit
By Ángel Páez
LIMA - At the initiative of the opposition parties, the Peruvian parliament approved the creation of a committee to investigate the clash early this month between indigenous protesters and the police near the town of Bagua in the northern province of Amazonas, which according to official reports left a death toll of 34.
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PERU: Families of Dead Native Protesters Tell Their Stories
By Milagros Salazar
BAGUA, Peru - Sobbing, an indigenous woman dressed in black cries out as she sees us arrive: "My son, my son, they have killed my son!" She is Andrea Rocca, the mother of Felipe Sabio, a young man who died in a clash between police and indigenous protesters in the northern Peruvian region of Amazonas.
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Q&A: "The Order Was to Kill Us"
Milagros Salazar interviews SALOMÓN AGUANASH, leader of native protests in Peru’s Amazon jungle
BAGUA, Peru - The Peruvian government described the recent deaths of police officers in clashes with indigenous protesters in the country’s Amazon rainforest as "genocide" at the hands of "extremist savages."
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The Amazon in RSSLand of myths and plunder, the Amazon is the Earth's largest tropical forest, and holds 20 percent of all plant and animal species. Flowing in the mighty Amazon River is 18 percent of all freshwater entering the oceans worldwide. In addition to the region's rich biodiversity are riches in minerals and fossil fuels.

The Amazon is home to dozens of indigenous cultures, with an array of languages and traditions, as well as other extractive communities and even large cities. Agricultural expansion, mining and mega-dams are a threat to the forest and its peoples. If current rates of deforestation continue, by 2050 the Amazon will have lost more than 30 percent of its forests, and the planet will suffer the climate changing consequences.

News in RSS
INDIA: Lay-offs from Recession-hit Gulf Lead to New Lives at Home
GREECE: New Migrant Law Tough But Respects Rights
US-IRAN: Sanctions Are the Talk of the Day
RIGHTS: Group Urges Bahrain to Stop Torture of Detainees
DEVELOPMENT: Crisis Could Open Doors for Change, Says UNCTAD
COSTA RICA: Chinchilla to Join Club of Women Presidents
UKRAINE: Back Full Circle
BIODIVERSITY: Companies Push Hard to Halt Tuna Collapse
MUSIC-BRAZIL: 'Enchanted' Guitars for Social Change
Q&A: ''There's a Limit to Fish Harvesting''
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News in RSS
THE WORST DISASTER IN AMAZON HISTORY - SO FAR
by Lucio Flavio Pinto
The massive spill of kaolin clay waste by the French multinational Imerys on June 11 in Barcarena, Brazil, is the largest environmental accident yet in the Amazon, writes Lucio Flavio Pinto, director of the Jornal Pessoal (Personal Diary), which denounces corruption, impunity, and the economic and ecological consequences of the exploitation of the Amazon.
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SAVE THE AMAZON, SAVE THE EARTH
by Leonardo Boff
Brazil today is being pulled between the need for economic growth and the need to preserve its natural resources, which is especially critical with regard to the Amazon, writes Leonardo Boff, a Brazilian theologian and writer.
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Brazil's MST - Landless Workers' Movement
Via Campesina - International Peasant Movement
Amazon Watch
AIDESEP - Peru's Indigenous Amazonian Development Federation
Brazil's National Amazon Research Institute
CONAIE - Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities of Ecuador
Global Forest Coalition
CATIE - Tropical Agricultural Research Centre
FAO's State of the World's Forests 2007
FUNEDESIN - Sustainable Development Foundation in Ecuador
Rainforest Action Network
Rainforest Alliance
Rainforestweb.org

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