Environmental defenders being killed in record numbers globally. By Jonathan Watts and John Vidal
Last year was the most
perilous ever for people defending their community’s land, natural resources or
wildlife, with new research showing that environmental defenders are
being killed at the rate of almost four a
week across the world. Two hundred
environmental activists, wildlife rangers and indigenous leaders trying to
protect their land were killed in 2016, according to the watchdog group Global Witness – more than double the number killed five years ago.
And the frequency of
killings is only increasing as 2017 ticks by, according to data provided
exclusively to the Guardian, with 98 killings identified in the first five
months of this year. John Knox, UN special
rapporteur on human rights and the environment, said: “Human rights are being
jettisoned as a culture of impunity is developing.
“There is now an overwhelming incentive to wreck the environment for economic reasons. The people most at risk are people who are already marginalised and excluded from politics and judicial redress, and are dependent on the environment. The countries do not respect the rule of law. Everywhere in the world, defenders are facing threats.
“There is an epidemic
now, a culture of impunity, a sense that anyone can kill environmental
defenders without repercussions, eliminate anyone who stands in the way. It
[comes from] mining, agribusiness, illegal logging and dam building.” Mexican indigenous
leader and opponent of illegal logging Isidro Baldenegro López was
killed in January.
In May, farmers in
Brazil’s Maranhão state attacked an indigenous settlement, hacking
with machetes at the hands of their victims in another land conflict
that left more than a dozen in hospital. There have also been killings of
environmental defenders and attacks on others in Colombia, Honduras, Mexico and
many other countries since the new year… read more:
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2017/jul/13/environmental-defenders-being-killed-in-record-numbers-globally-new-research-reveals