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LATIN AMERICA: Elusive Right to Land Inflames Indigenous Protests
By Milagros Salazar*
LIMA - In the past two decades Latin America has made advances in signing international and national instruments that recognise and protect the rights of indigenous peoples. The problem is that these laws are not always heeded by governments, and the lack of enforcement has fuelled protests.
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BRAZIL: Speculative Prices Block Land Reform
By Mario Osava
RIO DE JANEIRO - Rising land prices in Brazil, driven up by the boom in investment in rural property and the expansion of biofuels, are hindering agrarian reform, says João Pedro Stédile, an activist with the international peasant movement Via Campesina.
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PERU: Free Trade Opens Environmental Window
By Milagros Salazar*
LIMA - Legislative decree 1090, which modifies Peru's forest policy, is worrying U.S. trade authorities because it contravenes environmental clauses of the Free Trade Agreement (FTA) that is to enter force between the two countries in January 2009.
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ENVIRONMENT: Crisis Could Ease Pressure, But Not for Long
By Mario Osava
RIO DE JANEIRO - The global economic recession or slowdown that will result from the financial crisis that broke out in the United States could bring some benefits for the environment in the short-term - such as a reduction in power consumption and in the deforestation of the Amazon rainforest -, but the overall effect may turn out to be negative in the long run.
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ENVIRONMENT: Global Financial Crisis a Bad Sign for Andean Biodiversity
By Julio Godoy*
BARCELONA - The crisis affecting the financial sector and stock markets around the world could fuel the expansion of extractive industries in South America's Andean region, warn experts.
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PERU: Native Groups Hemmed in by Coca Threat
By Milagros Salazar
SATIPO, Peru - Small farmers from Peru’s impoverished Andean highlands provinces of Ayacucho are moving into indigenous land in the country’s central jungle region to grow coca.
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PERU: Birthing Houses Combine Native Traditions, Modern Medicine
By Milagros Salazar
PUERTO OCOPA, Peru - "Ashaninka women give birth at home, in accordance with tradition," declares José Ponce, the head of the health committee in Puerto Ocopa, a village of 253 Ashaninka indigenous families deep in the central Peruvian jungle.
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BRAZIL: Courts - the Battleground for Fight Against Paper Mills
By Clarinha Glock*
PORTO ALEGRE, Brazil - The battle against the wood pulp ndustry has intensified in the Brazilian courts, especially in those states where eucalyptus plantations have expanded the most: Bahia and Espírito Santo in the east and Rio Grande do Sul in the south.
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ENVIRONMENT-BRAZIL: Click Here to Plant a Tree
By Mario Osava*
RIO DE JANEIRO - It has become fashionable in Latin America to pursue initiatives towards "zero carbon", neutralising the climate-changing greenhouse gases produced by industry, commercial aviation and even the football World Cup - and along with it, atoning for the environmental sins of polluters.
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OIL-PERU: "The Ashaninka People Will Not Allow These Abuses"
By Milagros Salazar
SATIPO, Peru - "We will not allow the oil company to come in because it will bring pollution and we will suffer," said Medaly Pancho, a member of the Ashaninka community in the central Peruvian province of Junín. "We hunt and fish, we live our peaceful lives, and we don't want that to change."
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ENVIRONMENT: Amazon Increasingly Oily
By Milagros Salazar*
LIMA - More than 180 oil and natural gas fields extend across the western Amazon, shared by five South American countries and threatening biodiversity and indigenous lands, warns a study by U.S.-based organisations.
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Q&A: "Amazonas State Is in the Environmental Vanguard"
Interview with Nadia D'Ávila Ferreira, Amazonas Environment Secretary*
MANAOS, Brazil - The Brazilian state of Amazonas is "a quarry of ideas and creativity" and is in the vanguard for having preserved 98 percent of its native forests, paying for environmental services, and enacting the pioneering Climate Change Act, says Nadia D'Ávila Ferreira, the state's secretary for the environment and sustainable development.
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PERU: Indigenous Groups Win Major Battle in Congress
By Milagros Salazar
LIMA - The Peruvian Congress voted Friday to repeal two decrees that opened up communally owned native lands to private investment and that triggered a wave of protests this month by indigenous people in Amazon jungle provinces.
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BRAZIL: Setting an Important Precedent for Indigenous Lands
By Marta Caravantes*
BOA VISTA, Roraima, Brazil - An imminent decision by Brazil’s Supreme Court on the demarcation of the Raposa Serra do Sol indigenous reservation in the Amazon jungle region has the country’s native communities on edge, because of the precedent it will set.
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BOLIVIA: Businesses Take On the Green Challenge
By Bernarda Claure*
LA PAZ - What do Bolivia's largest textile mill, an organic cacao cooperative and an indigenous-run tourist hostel in the Amazon have in common? The answer lies in the path, shaky but inspiring, that they are all taking towards sustainable production.
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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
Q&A: ‘Creating Artificial Glaciers Is Simple, Easy and Replicable’
INDIA: ‘Glacier Man’ Vows to Build More Artificial Glaciers
US-INDIA: State Visit by Singh Could Smooth Bumpy Relations
PERU: Fighting Hunger with Native Crops
RIGHTS-CHAGOS: 'My Navel is Buried There'
GENDER-AFRICA: Some Progress Amidst Continuing Challenges
AFGHANISTAN: Insurgents Infiltrate Security Forces
LEBANON: Migrant Women Dying on the Job
POLITICS: U.N. in Final Push for 2015 Development Goals
CLIMATE CHANGE: Health at Risk
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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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