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Words and deeds in forest protection
Everyone seems to agree on the need
to protect the world’s remaining forests … while forests continue
to disappear at the same alarming rate as usual. It is therefore
important to distinguish between those who are truly committed
to forest protection and those whose deeds and words go in opposite
directions. For this purpose, most of the articles included in
this issue of the WRM bulletin serve as good examples.
Take for instance the case of the article
on Ecuador, where local communities are struggling to prevent
a Canadian mining company from destroying their environment,
which includes an area of primary forest of enormous biological
value located in the buffer zone of one of the country’s more
important ecological reserves. Men, women, and young people have
organized themselves under the common and nonnegotiable position
“No to Mining” which today has the unanimous support of all the
local governments in the region, in addition to the communities
within the limits or adjacent to the mining concessions.
In the case of Congo, the local Efe
people have used and protected the Ituri forest for centuries.
In the early 1990s, European and Malaysian commercial logging
companies began to destroy the forest –and thus the livelihoods
of the Efe- while the transnational corporations’ appetite over
the region’s minerals –gold and coltan- have brought in war and
further forest destruction.
In Laos, the Norwegian consulting firm
Norconsult won a US$1.5 million contract to supervise construction
work of the Xeset 2 dam, funded by the Norwegian Agency for Development
Cooperation. China is also heavily involved: the Import-Export
Bank of China is funding 80 per cent of the US$135 million project
and the main contractor is the China North Industries Corporation.
A local person says: "We do not want them to build the dam.
It will badly affect our land and the environment. … But we dare
not oppose government officials." Government agencies and
consultants –in Laos, Norway and China- know that this is true
but plans continue ahead.
Everyone knows that oil palm plantations
are a major cause of forest destruction. However, the Northern
demand for biodiesel is pushing the expansion of this crop throughout
the tropics. In the case of Thailand, the government plans to
increase plantations from the current 400,000 hectares to 1.2
million hectares by 2009. As the article included in this bulletin
states: “If an expansion of the oil palm plantation areas was
made according to the government’s plan, Thailand would irreversibly
lose its food security, forests and biological diversity. It would
mean a catastrophe for the Thai People.”
Several more articles provide further
examples about government-corporate doublespeak. Fortunately,
the coin has two sides. The other side includes organized local
peoples and supporting organizations, pushing forward their own
social and environmental agenda.
For instance, at the end of April this
year, the Brazilian Landless Peasants Movement and Via Campesina
organized an International Meeting on Monoculture Eucalyptus Plantations
to strategise on joint actions against the advance of monoculture
tree plantations and pulp mills in the South.
Also in April, Uruguayan small farmer
organizations, NGOs and other social organizations from the four
corners of the country launched a National Initiative for the
Suspension of Monoculture Tree Plantations.
In Uganda, the government finally decided
in May to drop its intention of giving away the Mabira Central
Forest Reserves for commercial sugar cane growing. This decision
was the result of strong demonstrations –where five people were
killed and many more injured- from local people against forest
destruction.
In Costa Rica, several organizations
are promoting family-centred forest restoration based on documented
experience carried out in the country, in opposition to the monoculture
tree plantation model implemented until now.
In sum, governments simply talk about
forest conservation, while people take real action to protect
their forests and environment. The explanation for the former
is profit. This is made clear in the article on the Finnish Botnia
pulp mill in Uruguay: Why is EU public money being used? As the
author says, “the answer to the question is simple: EU public
money is going to Botnia because it benefits European industry.”
The explanation for peoples’ struggles to protect their forests
is equally simple and exemplified in the Congo article: "You
will understand why we are called People of the Forest….When the
forest dies, we shall die."