José & Maria killed by loggers/ranchers.

foto. José and Maria. ‘They gunned them down and cut off their ears”

An Amazon environmental activist and his wife were killed late on Monday and the crime is being investigated as a possible assassination to silence the outspoken forest defender, according to police.

José Claudio Ribeiro da Silva, also known by his nickname of “Ze Claudio,” was shot and killed along with his wife, Maria do Espírito Santo da Silva, in Nova Ipixuna, a rural town of 15,000 people in the northeast Brazilian Amazon state of Para, about 40km from the nearest city, Maraba.

Exact details and circumstances of the death are not yet clear. However, Felicio Pontes a federal prosecutor in Para state, as well as Marcos Augusto Cruz, the local civil police investigator, told Al Jazeera by phone late on Tuesday that the killings have all the signs of a cold-blooded murder for hire.

“We are working on a hypothesis that this was an execution because the shooters cut off one ear of each of the victims,” Cruz told Al Jazeera.

“Usually this is done as proof to give back to whoever ordered the killings,” Cruz told Al Jazeera, before adding that is was likely he was killed in retaliation for speaking out against illegal loggers.

Ribeiro was a community leader of a rural Amazon sustainable reserve that produces nuts and natural oils native to the forest.

But as loggers moved into Para state, Ribeiro increased his candid denouncements of illegal clear cutting in the region, which earned him praise from environmentalists but allegedly scorn from logging and business interests who hold enormous influence in the heavily deforested region.

Death threats

Ribeiro received many death threats.

He told an audience at a TED summit last November that before the loggers moved in, the region where he lived had 85 per cent native Amazon vegetation.

“Today with the arrival of loggers… there is only 20 per cent of the native negotiation left,” Ribeiro said at the TED Summit. “It’s a disaster for people like me who live off of the forest.

“I protect the forest in any way I can.  That is why I live at gunpoint all the time, because I don’t just sit down, I stand up and denounce loggers, and coal burners and that is why they think I shouldn’t exist.”

In another video interview posted on YouTube last November, Ribeiro looks off camera and says to the interviewer: “I have received death threats by businessmen who work with loggers, who don’t want the forest standing.”

The news of the killing of Ribeiro and his wife came on the same day the Brazilian congress debated a controversial set of new laws called “Forest Code” which, according to environmentalists, would be harmful to the Amazon, reducing the amount of land preserved from clear cutting.

At the time of writing, the law was still being debated in congress.

In Brazil, Ribeiro’s killing has quickly been compared to that of Dorothy Stang, the American born Roman Catholic sister who was brutally shot and killed – also in a rural area of Para state – by two men after her vocal defense of the Amazon angered local loggers. (Four men in total have gone to trial for that murder and are serving jail time).

For environmentalists, rural parts of Para state are often known as the “land without law”, because of its reputation as a place where powerful loggers exact revenge on anybody who dares cross them.

State of impunity

“Para state is a place with a lot of impunity; there are over 400 murder cases unsolved involving people in rural areas,” Pontes, the state federal prosecutor told Al Jazeera.

President Dilma Rousseff reportedly ordered Federal Police to oversee the investigation on Tuesday.

While details of the killing are still unclear, more details have started to emerge.

Maria do Espirito Santo Silva and José Claudio Ribeiro da Silva, were killed  in the northeast Brazilian Amazon state of Para [Conselho Nacional das Populacoes Extrativistas]

Ribeiro’s niece, Clara Santos, told Al Jazeera by phone: “He left (Monday night) from the house to go to Maraba on his motorcycle with Maria. About eight kilometers from the house there were other men on motorbikes with their faces covered, waiting for them. The men shot Maria first. She fell from the motorcycle and right after they shot him.”

Ribeiro’s sister, Claudelice Silva dos Santos, told Al Jazeera on Tuesday her family is devastated.

“They have practically destroyed our family,” dos Santos said. “We want justice. We want the people that ordered this killing, as well as the shooters to be brought to justice. We don’t want this to end in impunity. We don’t want him to be just one more environmentalists killed.”

Despite the threats against him, Ribeiro reportedly never asked for protection.

Ribeiro is survived by two children from a previous marriage, and one adopted son, age 16.

The funeral services could be as early as Wednesday in Maraba, Brazil.

Gabriel Elizondo is an Al Jazeera correspondent based in Sao Paulo, Brazil. Follow him on Twitter: @elizondogabriel

Brasil: Asesinan a defensor de los bosques

Português · Brasil: Defensor da Floresta é Morto

Français · Brésil : Un défenseur de la forêt assassiné

bahasa Indonesia · Brazil: Forest Defender Shot Dead

English · Brazil: Forest Defender Shot Dead

Brasil

Mientras el congreso brasileño debate un nuevo Código Forestal, y el Ministerio del Medio Ambiente lanza nuevas acciones [ing] sobre la tala ilegal en Brasil, el defensor de los bosques José Cláudio Ribeiro da Silva fue asesinado a tiros [pt]. Él había anunciado [pt] que su vida estaba amenazada en la conferencia TEDxAmazonia, el pasado noviembre.

via Brasil: Asesinan a tiros a defensor de los bosques · Global Voices en Español.

FOREST DEFENDER’S WIFE ALSO MARTYRED

UPDATE: FOREST DEFENDER’S WIFE ALSO MARTYRED IN BRUTAL ASSASSINATION

José Cláudio Ribeiro da Silva speaking at TEDx Amazon in 2010
José Cláudio Ribeiro da Silva speaking at TEDx Amazon in 2010

[URGENT: Please join the new avaaz sign-on letter. It is in Portuguese for Brazilian officials but you can easily enter your name, email and country. Please help the Brazilian forest defenders NOW.]

More from Mongabay

José Cláudio Ribeiro da Silva and his wife, Maria do Espírito Santo da Silva, were gunned down last night in an ambush in the city of Nova Ipixuna in the Brazilian state of Pará. Da Silva was known as a community leader and an outspoken critic of deforestation in the region.

Police believe the da Silvas were killed by hired assassins because both victims had an ear cut off, which is a common token for hired gunmen to prove their victims had been slain, according to local police investigator, Marcos Augusto Cruz, who spoke to Al Jazeera. Suspicion immediately fell on illegal loggers linked to the charcoal trade that supplies pig iron smelters in the region.

José Cláudio Ribeiro da Silva, who also went by the nickname ‘Ze Claudio’, was a vocal critic of illegal logging in Pará, a state in Brazil that is rife with deforestation. He also worked as a community leader of an Amazon reserve that sold sustainably harvested forest products.

Da Silva had received countless death threats and had frequently warned that he could be killed at any time, however he was refused protection by officials.

“I will protect the forest at all costs. That is why I could get a bullet in my head at any moment … because I denounce the loggers and charcoal producers, and that is why they think I cannot exist,” da Silva said in a TED Talks last November, adding “but my fear does not silence me. As long as I have the strength to walk I will denounce all of those who damage the forest.”

Clara Santos, the niece of the da Silvas, told BBC that the couple had suffered death threats for 14 years. A report compiled by Brazil’s Catholic Land Commission, a human rights group, in 2008 listed Da Silva as one of the environmental activists most likely to be assassinated.

The double assassination comes at a fateful time for the Amazon rainforest. Politicians in Brazil are considering changing to its Forest Law, which would allow ranchers and farmers to cut down a higher percentage of forest on their land. A vote may occur today.

Brazilian environmental journalist, Felipe Milanez, has said the assassination of da Silva has created ‘another Chico Mendes’. Mendes was a rubber trapper turned Amazon activist whose 1988 assassination catalyzed efforts to save the Amazon.

Da Silva’s killing comes six years after Dorothy Stang, an American nun who fought against deforestation, was slain by gunmen hired by a cattle rancher, also in the state of Pará. Her death was met by a sharp crack-down by the Brazilian against illegal fore

#spanishrevolution.. para destruir el capitalismo…

Si no es para destruir el capitalismo… ¿para qué?
24 mai 2011
Huracanes en EEUU, terremotos en Centramérica, tsunamis en Japón. Contaminación nuclear con opacidad informativa, destrucción del territorio por grandes empresas en todos los lugares del mundo, guerras imperialistas en Libia, Irak, Afganistán, por el control de los recursos naturales y la posición geoestratégica. Empeoramiento de condiciones de trabajo en Occidente (perdida de pensiones, aumento del paro, disminución de salarios, desmantelamiento de sanidad, educación y asistencia social), mantenimiento (o empeoramiento) de condiciones de vida en países pobres, destrucción de modos de vida locales en todo el mundo, revueltas en el Magreb y otros países árabes, huelgas y manifestaciones en Grecia, Chile, Reino Unido, Francia, España, Italia…
tv-alienacion.jpg
El capitalismo, como sistema basado en el dinero y la mercancía, en la esclavitud del trabajo asalariado y el miedo a la exclusión social, es responsable de lo que pasa. Hasta que no cuestionemos la esencia del Capital y el Estado que lo respalda, no habrá cambios sustanciales. No queremos la gestión de los hospitales, de las escuelas, de la asistencia a lxs necesitadxs (necesitadxs precisamente por la misma precariedad que produce este sistema), mientras exista dinero, mercancías y relaciones mediadas por ellos. No queremos la gestión de algo basado en los mismos presupuestos. Queremos su desaparición. Y sabemos (al menos intuimos por la fuerza de la memoria, de la historia) que no habrá cambio sin violencia porque lxs que viven bien a costa de esto no querrán perder sus derechos. Entre ellxs políticos, empresarios, banqueros, especuladores de todo pelaje, comerciantes… Esto, a nuestro pesar.

Desde hoy los telediarios ya empiezan a cuestionar las acampadas. Ahora ya dan problemas. Desde lxs que llevan un negocio al lado y se ven afectados en sus ventas hasta los que distribuyen mercancías y ven dificultado el paso. Porque habrá problemas para celebrar la victoria del Barça o porque hay que hacer un desfile militar. Las excusas son variadas. La noticia ya no satisface el ansia de novedad. Es lo que tiene la vida de consumo y el consumo de la vida.

Si se quiere seguir adelante habrá que decidir si sequiere cuestionar realmente el status quo del capitalismo o replegarse hasta desaparecer tras 5, 10 ó 15 propuestas formales de mejorar lo existente (en nuestro ámbito nacional[1]) y esperar a que ‘nuestros políticos’ las hagan realidad. Y luego… hasta ´el próximo momento de indignación. La alternativa pasa por interrumpir la circulación del capital, la toma de lo que necesitamos, la ruptura con los gestores de la salud, de la educación, de la seguridad, de la defensa, de la cultura… y la propia organización y autogestión. Seguro que todxs no estaremos de acuerdo, pero habrá que arriesgarse.

[1] No olvidemos que lxs griegxs dependen también de lo que hagamos el resto de explotadxs de otros países. En los últimos días piden solidaridad internacional. Allí las condiciones son ya insostenibles y el Capital no tiene nada que ofrecerles, por lo que la represión es la respuesta del Estado. La revuelta permanente es la mejor solidaridad con nuestrxs hermanxs.

Mira també:
http://amotinadxs.blogspot.com/

URGENT AMAZON FOREST ALERT

URGENT AMAZON FOREST ALERT

slaughtering-the-amazon-cover

[UPDATE 20 May 2011: The Guardian UK reports, “Brazil forms ‘crisis cabinet’ following unexpected deforestation surge”.]

Events are moving quickly in Brazil’s epic battle over a new national Forest Code. The struggle has has reached a critical stage full of both danger and opportunity. Please take action.

EMERGENCY — BRAZIL’S NATIONAL MONITORING AGENCY JUST CONFIRMED THAT RECENT DEFORESTATION HAS JUMPED 473 PERCENT. THE SITUATION IS CRITICAL.

[Reuters reportagem em Português]

Sign the international petition to defend Brazil’s forests.

If you would rather sign a petition in Portuguese, here is one from avaaz.

The recent monitoring reports of both the government and the environmental NGOs showed prelimary data of a huge surge in deforestation as agribusiness and the ruralist coalition push to deforest and create a new code of amnesty for the forest destroyers. Today’s release of frightening new data shows how aggressive the large farmers and agribusiness are. PLEASE ACT NOW.

The Dilma government has been caught between its desire for for rapid economic development and its desire to maintain its green image to the international community where it has pledged to reduce emissions from deforestation and to maintain biodiversity. Additionally, it wants to showcase its “greenness” at the upcoming 2012 “Rio+20” world environment conference. Indeed, on the advice of its Foreign Ministry, the Dilma leadership delayed the recent Forest Code debate (google translation from Portuguese) in Congress in order to revise its position.

The good news it that IBAMA (the national environment protection agency) has just announced a new policy of zero deforestation. The future of the forest hangs between this positive initiative and the reckless campaign of ruralista deforestation. This is the defining moment!

[Update: Here are the latest reports on deforestation and the new IBAMA policy.]

ACT NOW. Sign the petition in English or in Portuguese to defend Brazil’s forests.

with thanks via:

http://lougold.blogspot.com/2011/05/urgent-amazon-forest-alert-events-are.html

BRAZIL’S NEW OIL PARTNER IS…GUESS WHO?

BRAZIL’S NEW OIL PARTNER IS.

bp5

GUESS WHO?

BP recently announced that the Brazilian National Petroleum, Natural Gas and Biofuels Agency (ANP) has approved its bid to purchase 10 exploration and production blocks in Brazil from Devon Energy. BP had declared its decision to buy the assets from Devon in March 2010, and had been waiting for the regulatory approvals from ANP since then.

However, the ANP put the deal in Brazil on hold — admittedly to see how BP contains the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico — and finally cleared it now seeing BP’s response to the world’s largest accidental oil spill.

With the Brazilian deepwaters showing a lot of promise in terms of oil and gas reserves, BP’s exploration in the area is expected to primarily add to the company’s oil production capacity in the years to come.

More from Forbes

Beef industry destroying Amazon

Brazilian beef industry blamed for Amazon deforestation

McDonalds top list of world criminals

Boots and training shoes are not the first things that spring to mind when you think about the causes of rainforest destruction and climate change, but just because the connection isn’t obvious doesn’t mean it isn’t realm, says Greenpeace in a new report, “Slaughtering the Amazon”


SLAUGHTERING THE AMAZON

slaughtering-the-amazon-cover

Greenpeace fingers out Lula da Silva’s complacency with the industry and ranchers Greenpeace fingers out Lula da Silva’s complacency with the industry and ranchers illegal deforestation and in some cases slavery, via giant processing facilities to the supply chains of some of the best known global brands. Shoe companies like Adidas, Reebok, Nike, Timberland and even Clarks are sourcing a significant proportion of their leather from the Amazon – and its big business.

via Brazilian beef industry blamed for Amazon deforestation — MercoPress.