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OUR VIEWPOINT
Forest
peoples’ health depends on the health of forests
Forests provide for the livelihoods
of hundreds of millions of people worldwide and particularly in the
tropical areas. Whatever activities are carried out that imply deforestation
or forest degradation will therefore impact directly on the means of
survival of those people and thus also on their health.
One of the immediate effects of
forest loss is a decrease in the availability of the food provided by
forest plants and animals, such as fruit, seeds, roots, honey, vegetables,
mushrooms, insects, meat, and so on. The result will be malnourishment,
which generates conditions for disease, particularly –though not
only- in children.
At the same time, some of the activities
leading to deforestation and forest degradation add other problems which
impact on local people’s health. Such is the case of oil exploitation,
which brings in air and water pollution over huge forest areas. Local
communities are left with no option but to continue drinking, cooking
and bathing in contaminated water and breathing the polluted air, all
leading to increased illnesses. The same happens with open-pit mining
and pollution linked to the poisonous chemicals used by this industry.
Industrial logging, hydroelectric
dams, commercial shrimp farming, large-scale agriculture, cattle-raising,
monoculture tree plantations are also important activities leading to
forest loss. In many cases, these and the above activities are imposed
on communities against their will, thus generating a situation of social
stress that also impacts on people’s physical and mental health.
More than often, they also lead to repression and to the ultimate blow
on health: murder.
There is also a toxic war that is
unleashed against local communities. Perhaps the worst case is the current
herbicide spraying being carried out by the US-backed Colombian government
allegedly to combat coca cultivation. But a “low level war”
is also being staged in numerous countries through the use of toxic
chemical spraying in large scale agricultural or tree monocultures.
This results in yet additional impacts to local people’s health
by polluting their water and air, while plantation workers are even
more at risk by manipulating those toxic products.
For some forest peoples, the main
threat is bacteriological. Isolated indigenous forest communities are
facing –though they are unaware about this- the most serious health
hazard: the introduction of new diseases to which their organisms are
not adapted. In the past, the introduction by Europeans of smallpox,
measles, typhus and other diseases proved much deadlier than the European’s
weapons used against the Amerindian population. In the past, the colonizers
may have had the excuse of ignorance but today’s governments and
corporations certainly don’t.
In the case of most forest peoples,
who traditionally use a wide variety of medicinal plants available in
forest areas, the most immediate cause of concern is the loss of medicines.
Deforestation and substitution of forests by other commercial activities
(such as agriculture, cattle raising, timber and oil palm plantations)
result in the scarcity or even total disappearance of some of those
plants at the local level, thus eliminating this vital resource when
it is most needed to cure the illnesses resulting from those same activities.
It is important to underscore that
for indigenous peoples, health is not constrained to the narrow concept
of lack of illnesses but is a dynamic process that covers social and
economic aspects. For them, the forest is part of their identity, their
cultural practices and beliefs; they coexist with the forest through
interdependency. If the forest is gone, also their identity is gone
which is to say their life, their health.
In sum, the health of forest and
forest-dependent peoples is highly dependent on the health of the forest
ecosystem. If governments are serious in their discourse about the importance
of health, then this is an additional reason for generating the necessary
conditions for forest conservation.
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