Showing posts with label assassination. Show all posts
Showing posts with label assassination. Show all posts

Remembering Some of the Earth Defenders Who Were Killed in 2019

Here are some of the brave souls who gave their lives in 2019 in defense of the environment. There have been an increasing number of environmental activists murdered in recent years. Many of the murders in 2019 took place in Brazil which is currently being ruled by far-right Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro. In Brazil a total of 56 defenders were assassinated in 2017 alone. At least eight land defenders were killed in 2018 in the Brazilian state of Para alone.

Since becoming president Bolsonaro has all but declared war on the Amazon and the indigenous people of Brazil.Tashka Yawanawa, a chief of the indigenous Yawanawa people in the Brazilian Amazon says his community is facing "genocide". Some have suggested that the fires in Brazil are a form of genocide.

There are also concerns that Guatamalan Mayans could be facing genocide. By January 2019 reports surfaced that indicated Guatemala's community leaders were being killed for defending their land from from transnational companies. This comes after four decades of civil war that left more than 200,000 causalities, most of them indigenous Guatemalans. This has been described by some Guatemalan courts as genocide. In 2018 there were hundreds of attacks and dozens of murders in Guatemala. One such murder was that of 25 year old Ixil Maya nurse, Juana Raymundo, near the city of Nebaj. Raymundo was one of 20 similar murders that took place in Guatemala in the summer of 2018. Many of those that end up on U.S. borders are Guatemalans fleeing violence.

The killings continued in Guatemala in 2019. In July, Jorge Juc a 77-year-old indigenous Maya Q'eqchi' community leader was hacked to death with machetes while he tended his cornfield in eastern Guatemala. Isidro Pérez and Melecio Ramírez were two more Guatemalan activists who were killed in July. These two indigenous rights activists and land protectors were murdered in Eastern Guatemala while attending a peaceful action.

Also in July, dozens of armed gold miners murdered Emyra Wajãpia Waiapi, he was the leader of Yvytotõ an indigenous village in northern Brazil. In September Maxciel Pereira dos Santos, a defender of Brazil’s indigenous tribes was executed in the Amazon town of Tabatinga.

In October five indigenous leaders were massacred in the southwestern region of Cauca in Colombia. Cristina Bautista, chief of the Nasa Tacueyó reservation and four of the community’s unarmed guards were killed, 6 others were wounded. In the last four years at least 700 social leaders, mostly Afro-Colombian and indigenous activists, have been murdered in Colombia.

In November, illegal loggers murdered Paulo Paulino Guajajara an Amazon Forest Guardian inside the Araribóia reservation in the northeastern state of Maranhão, Brazil. His partner was also injured but managed to escape. Not all of these murders occurred in central and south America many also took place in Asia, most notably in the Philippines and India. Poachers have also taken a toll on rangers in Africa. In November Ranger Kambale Kasuki Jean Aimé was ambushed and killed by armed assailants near Ngwenda village (Rutshuru Territory). One of the truck drivers was also murdered and a second ranger sustained non-life-threatening injuries.

Related
The Rising Toll of Murdered Environmental Activists
Remembering Berta on International Women's Day
The Slaughter of Innocents: Our Complicity in the Murder of Environmentalists
Activists Opposing Illegal Logging Murdered in Peru
Environmentalists Continue to be Murdered or Silenced by Courts All Around the World
The Persecution of Environmentalists
Another Amazon Environmentalist Killed (Video)
Environmentalists Murdered for Protecting the Amazon
Murder of Two Environmentalists in the Amazon (Video)

The Rising Toll of Murdered Environmental Activists

Each year environmental activists are killed for trying to defend the natural world. It is fitting that we start the year by remembering the brave souls who are on the front lines of efforts to protect their land, water or local wildlife. For every environmental activist killed hundreds more were assaulted. This includes the indigenous activists in Brazil who had their hands cut off with machetes by ranchers. To add insult to injury the perpetrators of these villainous acts are almost never caught.

The murderers are linked to agribusiness, mining, poaching and wildlife trafficking. These killings commonly take place in corrupt tropical and subtropical countries, particularly in Central and South America. Some of the most deadly countries are Brazil, the Philippines, Colombia, Mexico and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Indigenous people make up a disproportionately large proportion of the victims. This is but the most recent manifestation of a long history of indigenous murders.  In recent years these murders have reached their highest point since colonial times.
  • In 2010 at least 96 environmental activists were killed. 
  • In 2011 at least 106 environmental activists were murdered.
  • In 2012 at least 147 environmental activists were slain.
  • In 2014 at least 116 environmental activists were assassinated.
  • In 2015 at least 185 environmental activists were killed.
  • In 2017 a total of 207 environmental activists were murdered.
  • In 2018 164 environmental activists were slain.
As reported by the Guardian a recent report indicates that at least 1,558 environmental activists in 50 states were killed between 2002 and 2017. Even by these conservative estimates, this represents a doubling of such murders in the last 15 years. These murders now occur at an average rate of four per week.

People in the north are complicit in the murder of these environmentalists.  Nathalie Butt, a researcher at the University of Queensland and the author of the study on murdered environmental activists said companies and consumers in wealthy countries in the northern hemisphere should take responsibility for products sourced in the south. "We need to make ethics and transparency an important part of the supply chain. We need to ensure that there is no blood on our hands," she said.

Related
Remembering Some of the Earth Defenders Who Were Killed in 2019
The Slaughter of Innocents: Our Complicity in the Murder of Environmentalists
Remembering Berta on International Women's Day
Environmentalists Continue to be Murdered or Silenced by Courts All Around the World
The Persecution of Environmentalists
Environmental Problems and Activists Struggling Against Abuse (Video)

Suspected Assassins of Berta Cáceres Arrested in Honduras

On May 11th the Honduran government arrested four men and charged them with the murder of indigenous environmental activist Berta Cáceres. She was killed because of her opposition to the Agua Zarca hydropower project in the Gulacarque river basin. Men affiliated with Desarrollos Energéticos S.A. (DESA), the Honduran company building the dam, are implicated in her murder.

The shots that killed Berta echoed around the globe. The world was outraged that the winner of the 2015 Goldman Environmental Prize, was savagely gunned down for what can only be described as her noble efforts to defend the rights of her people and protect the land on which they live.

After she was killed there was an unremitting cry for an independent international investigation. Berta's daughter even called for the suspension of aid to Honduras. As the pressure mounted, the Honduran government capitulated and arrested Berta's killers two months after she was murdered.

Sierra Club Executive Director Michael Brune commented on the apprehension of Berta's assassins in the following statement:
"Berta Cáceres was a remarkable and inspiring leader who fought tirelessly for indigenous rights and environmental justice for her community and the world. It is clear that the Honduran government heeded the massive international call for justice, and these arrests represent a small victory for Berta’s family, friends, and the entire environmental justice and human rights community. Now we join with those demanding to know the truth about who orchestrated the assassination. Tragically, this kind of justice is increasingly rare, and the murder of activists is frighteningly common. The fight for a safe, clean, and equitable future for all is far from over, but we stand with activists across the world who continue to work toward this shared vision, and we will strive to honor Berta’s unparalleled passion. Berta’s life may have been tragically cut short, but her legacy will live on for generations to come."
In a world that can seem awash with ignorance and apathy, Berta stands out for being a dedicated soul who fought the good fight, to the bitter end. She called us all to, "undertake the struggle in all parts of the world."

Berta Cáceres, remember that name and be inspired by her legacy.

Related 
Remembering Berta on International Women's Day
The Slaughter of Innocents: Our Complicity in the Murder of Environmentalists
Activists Opposing Illegal Logging Murdered in Peru
Environmentalists Continue to be Murdered or Silenced by Courts All Around the World
The Persecution of Environmentalists
Cambodian Environmentalist Murdered
Who Bombed Judi Bari? (Video Trailer)
Environmental Problems and Activists Struggling Against Abuse (Video)
Another Amazon Environmentalist Killed (Video)
Environmentalists Murdered for Protecting the Amazon
Murder of Two Environmentalists in the Amazon (Video)

The Slaughter of Innocents: Our Complicity in the Murder of Environmentalists

All around the world, people who are on the front lines of efforts to protect our planet are murdered for their eco-advocacy. They put their lives on the line, and they are being slaughtered while the world does not appear to notice. Many other environmentalists are subject to intimidation, violence, stigmatization and criminalization. As revealed in a 2012 article, environmentalists are persecuted and killed all over the world. In 2012, there were a total of 147 environmentalists murdered. Although these heinous crimes are getting more media coverage, the frequency of these killing appears to be accelerating.

According to a report from Global Witness, titled Deadly Environment (PDF), the murder of those who advocate for the environment sharply increased between 2002 and 2013. During this time, at least 908 people are known to have been killed in 35 countries for little more than advocating for land rights, trying to protect trees or exposing the environmental impacts of mining operations. Even more tragic is the fact that these killers act with impunity as the conviction rate for these crimes is only around 1 percent.

The report shows that a troubling trend is emerging with more murders having occurred in recent years. On average there are now two activists murdered each week.

“There can be few starker or more obvious symptoms of the global environmental crisis than a dramatic upturn in killings of ordinary people defending rights to their land or environment,” said Oliver Courtney of Global Witness. “Yet this rapidly worsening problem is going largely unnoticed, and those responsible almost always get away with it.”

The report indicates that indigenous communities are most at risk and some of the most dangerous areas for environmentalists are in Latin America and Asia-Pacific. Brazil is the most dangerous place with 448 killings, followed by Honduras with 109 and the Philippines with 67.

Isidro Tendetza Antún

Recently, an Ecuadorean leader was murdered to keep him from sharing his story with world leaders at the recent UN climate talks in Lima, Peru. As the negotiations commenced in Lima, the tortured, bound and buried body of José Isidro Tendetza Antún was discovered. It is widely believed that he was killed for being a vocal defender of an Ecuadorian forest that is at risk from the Mirador copper and gold mine. Prior to his murder, his crops were burned and he was threatened.

In Ecuador, foreign multinational companies are invited by the government and they are afforded protections by the state, the police and the army. The same cannot be said for the country’s indigenous people. It is very likely that the Ecuadorian authorities are complicit in the killing of Tendetza.

Others have also been killed in Ecuador for their opposition to Mirador, they include Bosco Wisum in 2009 and Freddy Taish in 2013. In addition to these murders, at the end of 2014, a group of campaigners traveling in a “climate caravan” was repeatedly stopped by police on the way to COP20 in Lima. When this did not deter them, their bus was confiscated.

Tendetza’s killers, like those who killed Wisum and Taish, are still at large.

Prajob Naowa-opas

Not all murders go unsolved, the case of Prajob Naowa-opas is one such rare exception. Prajob lived in central Thailand. As head of his village he did everything he could to save his community form illegal dumping of toxic waste. He filed petitions and blocked trucks from making their lethal deliveries. Then one day, in broad daylight, a gunman silenced him forever by shooting him four times.

His killers, including a senior government official, have been sentenced to death for the crime. However, the sentences of 2 of the 3 have been commuted to life in prison for cooperating with authorities. Not only have Prajob’s killers been sentenced, but the dumping has been stopped and villagers have erected a statue as a token of their gratitude to their slain hero.

Justice is a rare occurrence in such crimes with only 10 out of 908 murdered environmental activists having been convicted between 2002 and 2013.

Remi Fraisse

It is not only disreputable companies and nefarious governments that are responsible for the these deaths. In France, a young environmental activist by the name of Remi Fraisse was killed during a protest against the controversial Sivens Dam Project in southwestern France. Initial investigation results suggest the 21-year-old protester may have been killed by a police concussion grenade. Activists are concerned that the dam would jeapordize 94 protected species that reside in the forest.

Countless others

The number of sad stories are far too numerous to review. Victims have ranged from a 70-year-old farmer like Jesus Sebastian Ortiz, one of several people in the Mexican town of Cheran killed for opposing illegal logging, to the shooting of indigenous anti-mining activist Juvy Capion and her two sons by Philippine armed forces.

It is not only murder but intimidation as well. Survival International released a video of a gunman terrorizing a Guarani indigenous community in Brazil, which has recently resettled on land taken from them by ranchers decades ago.

The situation is actually far worse than the 908 murders confirmed by Global Witness. Suspected murders in Ethiopia, Myanmar, Venezuela, and Zimbabwe were left out of the report because they could not be independently confirmed. There are also many places where Global Witness does not have access to information. This includes African countries such as Nigeria, Democratic Republic of Congo, Central African Republic and Zimbabwe. All of these nations are suffering from resource-fueled unrest, but the incidences of violence and murder go unreported.

What must be done

Clearly, we need a more coordinated and concerted effort from human rights organizations and governments to monitor the issue and bring those responsible to justice. Global Witness would like to see a resolution related to the threats faced by environmentalists from the UN’s Human Rights Council. The private sector also has an important role to play overseeing their operations and their supply chains to make sure no harm is done.

“[I]t has never been more important to protect the environment, and it has never been more deadly,” said Oliver Courtney of Global Witness. “…We hope our findings will act as the wake-up call that national governments and the international community clearly need.”

John Knox, United Nations independent expert on human rights and the environment said, “The international community must do more to protect them from the violence and harassment.”

If we fail to stand up for those who have the courage to die defending our planet, we should consider ourselves complicit in the endemic culture of impunity.

Source: Global Warming is Real

Related
Activists Opposing Illegal Logging Murdered in Peru
Environmentalists Continue to be Murdered or Silenced by Courts All Around the World
The Persecution of Environmentalists
Cambodian Environmentalist Murdered
Who Bombed Judi Bari? (Video Trailer)
Environmental Problems and Activists Struggling Against Abuse (Video)
Another Amazon Environmentalist Killed (Video)
Environmentalists Murdered for Protecting the Amazon (Video)
Murder of Two Environmentalists in the Amazon (Video)

Activists Opposing Illegal Logging Murdered in Peru

The persecution and murder of environmental activists is an all too common event in our world, now four more people have been added to that list. The murders took place on September 1, 2014, near the Peruvian border with Brazil. All indications are that the four Asheninka natives were killed by illegal loggers. The Ashaninkas are Peru's leading Amazon ethnic group and they have been subject to growing violence.

One of those killed was the prominent anti-logging campaigner, Edwin Chota. Chota had been repeatedly threatened before his assassination and had asked for protection from Peruvian authorities. He was the leader of Alto Tamaya-Saweto, a community in Peru’s Amazon Ucayali region. He has fought for his people’s right to gain titles to their land and expel illegal loggers.

The other slain men were identified by a police as Jorge Rios, who was Chota’s deputy, Leoncio Quincicima and Francisco Pinedo.

The murders underscore the absence of military or police presence in the area. Indigenous leader Henderson Rengifo, called on the Peruvian state to do more protect indigenous people from criminal mafias.

Widespread corruption in regional governments allow these logging mafias to operate with impunity. This means courageous activists like Chota are forced to take on criminal logging syndicates while the government ignores their pleas for help.

Related Posts
Environmentalists Continue to be Murdered or Silenced by Courts All Around the World
The Persecution of Environmentalists
Cambodian Environmentalist Murdered
Who Bombed Judi Bari? (Video Trailer)
Environmental Problems and Activists Struggling Against Abuse (Video)
Another Amazon Environmentalist Killed (Video)
Environmentalists Murdered for Protecting the Amazon (Video)
Murder of Two Environmentalists in the Amazon (Video)

Environmentalists Continue to be Murdered or Silenced by Courts All Around the World

If the killing of environmentalists were not enough, courtrooms all around the world are actively silencing environmental protest. Seven hundred advocates have been murdered in the last ten years and countless others are being silenced by courts. A recent report by human rights organization Global Witness documents the murders of more than 700 environmental and indigenous-rights activists over the last ten years. That translates to an average of more than one murder each week over the last decade.

The Global Witness data does not include those who are being jailed, assaulted, intimidated, harassed, or otherwise abused. We must support those who are persecuted for admirable activities like protecting wildlife, resisting illegal logging, or protesting against destructive corporate activities. It is unconscionable that people should be subjected to such treatment, it is even worse that the world often ignores the sacrifices they make for their noble endeavors.
The judiciary in many countries do not seek justice against the perpetrators of such crimes protect, if fact they all too often complicit in efforts to silence environmentalists. Sadly, in extreme cases the courts are sometimes even used to "legally" kill environmental activists.

Less than a decade ago, the Nigerian military harassed and ultimately killed a group of people for their opposition to Shell Oil. In November 1995, the military government convened a special court that detained, tried, convicted and executed members of the Ogani community on spurious charges.

We have come to expect such behavior from countries like Sri Lanka, Guatemala and the Democratic Republic of Congo as these are some of the worst nations in the world when it comes to the persecution of environmentalists. However countries like Brazil, Mexico and the Philippines are not much better.

Even nations that have functioning democracies can use the courts to silence environmentalists and defend the interests of ecologically destructive industries. This is the case of the Arctic 30 who are currently facing trumped up charges of Hooliganism in Russia over their peaceful protest at a Gazprom oil rig in the Arctic.

Some will say that Russia is a pervasively corrupt society and the courts would never silence environmental protest in the US. These people would be wrong, one example involves a ruling by a California court in 2012. Shell Oil successfully petitioned California's Ninth Circuit Court of Appeal to pass an injunction that blocked Greenpeace from protesting against Shell's activities in the Arctic.

We must remember those who have been murdered for their stalwart defense of the planet and its resources. We should also strive to protect the rights of those who are being "legally" silenced by the courts.

© 2013, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

Related Articles
The Persecution of Environmentalists
Cambodian Environmentalist Murdered
Who Bombed Judi Bari? (Video Trailer)
Environmental Problems and Activists Struggling Against Abuse (Video)
Another Amazon Environmentalist Killed (Video)
Environmentalists Murdered for Protecting the Amazon (Video)
Murder of Two Environmentalists in the Amazon (Video)

Cambodian Environmentalist Murdered

A prominent environmental activist was murdered in Cambodia and that nation's military police have closed the investigation. According to police, there will be no further investigation into the shooting death of Chut Wutty because the officer who shot him then took his own life.

Chut Wutty is the director of the National Resources Protection Group. Wutty was investigating illegal logging when he was killed in the forests of Cambodia which are full of illegal loggers.

Wutty was murdered in a place where a Chinese company is building a hydro dam. Although police initially said there was an exchange of gunfire between Wutty and the officer, but a pistol with nine bullets was found inside Chut Wutty’s car and it had not been discharged.

The Center for Cambodian Civic Education, A Cambodian rights group, described it as “cold-blooded murder."

Illegal logging in Cambodia often has government protection. Patrick Alley, director of Global Witness, said the shooting exposed the risks environmental activists in Cambodia face “in the most shocking and tragic manner.” Amnesty International said Wutty had received threats because of his activities, and called for “an immediate and proper investigation into what happened.”

Alley said in a statement that Chut Wutty was “one of the few remaining Cambodian activists willing to speak out against the rapid escalation of illegal logging and land grabbing which is impoverishing ordinary Cambodians and destroying the country’s rich natural heritage.”

© 2012, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

Related Posts
The Persecution of Environmentalists
Who Bombed Judi Bari? (Video Trailer)
Environmental Problems and Activists Struggling Against Abuse (Video)
Another Amazon Environmentalist Killed (Video)
Environmentalists Murdered for Protecting the Amazon (Video)
Murder of Two Environmentalists in the Amazon (Video)

The Persecution of Environmentalists

Environmentalists risk harassment, torture and even death, simply for standing up for the Earth. Reports of injustice perpetrated against environmentalists may sound like medieval tales of brutality, but these horror stories are taking place today in countries all around the world.
Amongst the countless environmentalists who have been persecuted for their ecological efforts is Joab Omondi. In the 1980s, when he was a student in Kenya, Joab was tortured by the authorities simply because he campaigned to protect the wetlands near his home.

China

In China, many people are being detained and tortured for standing up for the environment. People who are jailed for things like conservationism are commonly framed as criminals, accused of being separatists, or charged under national security laws.

In the summer of 2011, three environmentally concerned brothers were incarcerated in China on trumped up charges. Rinchen Samdup and Chime Namgyal ran an award-winning NGO devoted to protecting the Himalayan environment. Rinchen was sentenced to a five-year jail term and Chime, a disabled person, was given 21 months of labor and re-education.

The two brothers are reportedly being tortured while in prison. A third brother who petitioned for their release was also tortured and received a 15-year jail sentence on the basis of fabricated evidence.

United States

The documentary “Who Bombed Judi Bari?,” reviews the tragic fate of an environmentalist who peacefully campaigned in defense of old growth forests in the Pacific Northwest. Bari was an effective organizer who successfully exposed the truth about a powerful and corrupt industry. Bari showed us that when billions of dollars are at stake, people are capable of savage inhumanity.

The film reveals a dark and sinister side to corporate hubris. It shows just how far some unscrupulous actors will go to protect their interests, but it is also the story of one woman’s perseverance and ultimate victory. However, this was a triumph that came at great personal cost.

Bari was repeatedly harassed and subject to death threats, which culminated in an assassination attempt. On May 24, 1990, as Bari and her friend, Darryl Cherney were driving to Earth First!’s Redwood Summer, a shrapnel-wrapped pipe bomb went off under their car. The explosion nearly killed Bari and it injured Cherney.

To add insult to injury, both Bari and Cherney were arrested following the blast and charged with explosives violations. Despite great personal risk, Bari refused to fall silent. Before she could be vindicated, Bari died from breast cancer.

Justice was finally served twelve years after the bombing and five years after Bari’s death. A federal jury awarded the late Bari and Cherney $4.4 million for violations of their rights, illegal search and false arrest. A total of seven law enforcement officials were found to have broken the law and violated civil rights in the framing of these two people.

Russia

Environmentalists suffered during a crackdown in Russia after newly elected president Vladimir Putin came to power. In 1996, as head of the Federal Security Service (former KGB), Putin charged Alexsandr Nikitin, a scientist and former Russian naval captain, with acts of treason for sharing his concerns about the nuclear hazards of Russian nuclear submarines.

“The espionage charges brought against Mr. Nikitin violated international human rights standards and Russia’s own constitution,” said Dr. William F.  Schulz, Executive Director of Amnesty International USA.
“Putin’s hostility toward those who would expose the environmental pollution caused by Russia’s military industrial complex should not only concern those  who want to avoid future Chernobyl-style nuclear accidents and other massive  environmental catastrophes, it should concern anyone who values the future of a democratic Russia,” said Carl Pope, Executive Director of Sierra Club.
In 1996, Aleksandr Nikitin was declared a prisoner of conscience by Amnesty International, the first in post-Soviet Russia. In 1997, Nikitin was awarded the prestigious Goldman Environmental Prize for environmental heroism.

Mexico

In Mexico, corrupt courts are often used to curtail the activities of environmental activists. Felipe Arreaga was an active member of the OCESP, an organization that was created to peacefully campaign against deforestation due to illegal logging. It is widely reported that these illegal logging operations were linked to senior state government officials.

In 1999, two OCESP members, Rodolfo Montiel and Teodoro Cabrera, were detained by the military and tortured to force them to confess to firearms and drugs offenses. The two were convicted on the basis of fabricated evidence. In 2000, Montiel was awarded several international prizes, including the  Goldman Environmental Prize. In 2001, President Fox ordered their release in the face of massive national and international pressure.

On November 3, 2004, Felipe Arreaga was arrested, and charged with a murder he did not commit. Amnesty International declared Felipe a “prisoner of conscience” and feared that his arrest and the issuing of arrest warrants against fourteen former members of the OCESP are reprisals against the organization for its environmental activism.

In June of 2004, Isidro Baldenegro and Hermenegildo Rivas, Tarahumara indigenous anti-logging activists, were finally released from prison after prosecutors concluded that there was no basis for the weapons and drug charges filed against them. Several officers have now been charged with planting marijuana and weapons during the initial arrest.

El Salvador

As reported by Friends of the Earth, Salvadoran environmentalists are fighting for a ban on destructive mining projects. For their efforts, they risk incarceration, injury and death. Since 2009, people have been threatened, assaulted, or intimidated in response to their efforts to protect El Salvador’s water, resources and livelihoods from harmful mining projects.

Father Neftalí is an anti-mining organizer who has been repeatedly subject to harassment and death threats.  On January 20, 2012, Father Neftalí was tied up in his home by three men. They searched through all of his possessions and took his computer, cell phones, and an external hard drive. It is suspected that this was about intelligence gathering as no money was stolen.

Father Neftalí is a member of the National Roundtable against Metallic Mining (the Mesa, in Spanish). In a press statement, the Mesa said: “[We] condemn the wave of persecution against environmentalists and human rights defenders who like, Father Neftalí, have suffered similar treatment since the beginning of the anti-mining struggle in El Salvador.”

Although Father Neftali is still alive, others have not been so lucky. In 2009, three similar activists were savagely murdered for opposing mining in El Salvador:
  1. Gustavo Marcelo Rivera, co-founder of the Asociación Amigos de San Isidro Cabañas was tortured and murdered in June 2009.
  2. Ramiro Rivera, president of the Environmental Committee of Cabanas for the Defense of Water and Culture, was murdered along with Felicita Echeverria in December 2009.
  3. Dora Alicia Recinos Sorto, 8 months pregnant, was murdered in December 2009, by assassins who were in search of her husband. Her small child was also injured.
After years of difficult struggle by the Mesa and local communities, they have succeeded in forcing the government to undertake a strategic environmental impact assessment of mining in the country. Although it is being challenged in the courts, mining permits were even denied to some of the most egregious offenders.
These are but a few examples of the countless thousands that have worked to defend the Earth. Even now there are thousands of environmental activists that are incarcerated or being threatened with death simply because they are trying to protect a forest, a mountain or a stream.

A society that does not defend those who protect the Earth is a bankrupt society. Peacefully defending the planet is not a crime, it is a virtue. Just as we recognize people for their brave defense of human rights, we must also recognize people for defending the planet.

Victory is not easily achieved and it is sometimes won at great cost. We owe it to those on the ecological front lines to remember their dedication, courage and resilience. Perhaps we could even strive to cultivate those qualities in ourselves.


Related Posts
Cambodian Environmentalist Murdered
Who Bombed Judi Bari? (Video Trailer)
Environmental Problems and Activists Struggling Against Abuse (Video)
Another Amazon Environmentalist Killed (Video)
Environmentalists Murdered for Protecting the Amazon (Video)
Murder of Two Environmentalists in the Amazon (Video)

Environmental Problems and Activists Struggling Against Abuse



Some members of NGOs and their leaders are persecuted or even killed for their environmental work. The Jesuit nun Dorothy Stang she was killed at Brazilian Amazon rainforest defending the indigenous peoples rights. Unfortunately the list of abuses is long. This video was created by Amnesty International and many progressive freelance filmmakers. This is the story of main environmental rights activists. They are protecting and defending the defenseless minorities, indigenous people their rights against the powerful multinational companies and arrogant power structure of government who don’t care the principles of human rights and the rights of people and environment.

Related Posts
The Persecution of Environmentalists
Cambodian Environmentalist Murdered
Who Bombed Judi Bari? (Video Trailer)
Another Amazon Environmentalist Killed (Video)
Environmentalists Murdered for Protecting the Amazon (Video)
Murder of Two Environmentalists in the Amazon (Video)

Another Amazon Environmentalist Killed (Video)



In 2011 Brazilian police reported that yet another Amazon environmental campaigner had been killed. Adelino Ramos was known for openly denouncing those who illegally cut the rainforest. His is just the latest in a long line of murders of such environmental activists. How many will have to die before we do what is right in defense of our Earth?

© 2012, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

Related Posts
The Persecution of Environmentalists
Cambodian Environmentalist Murdered
Who Bombed Judi Bari? (Video Trailer)
Environmental Problems and Activists Struggling Against Abuse (Video)
Environmentalists Murdered for Protecting the Amazon (Video)
Murder of Two Environmentalists in the Amazon (Video)

Environmentalists Murdered for Protecting the Amazon




Brazilian environmentalists Jose Claudio Ribeiro da Silva and his wife were killed in an ambush in an Amazonian nature reserve in 2011. These murders are but two examples of many around the world. Like so many other brave souls, Ribeiro da Silva and his wife were true heros who persevered despite the dangers of protecting the Amazon.


© 2012, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

Related Posts
The Persecution of Environmentalists
Cambodian Environmentalist Murdered
Who Bombed Judi Bari? (Video Trailer)
Environmental Problems and Activists Struggling Against Abuse (Video)
Another Amazon Environmentalist Killed (Video)
Murder of Two Environmentalists in the Amazon (Video)

Murder of Two Environmentalists in the Amazon


Two rainforest activists were gunned down in May 2011. Activists claim that the murders are linked to the ongoing battle that pits environmentalists and small farmers seeking to protect the Amazonian rainforest, against landowners who want to expand their crops and cattle ranching there. José Cláudio Ribeiro da Silva and his wife, Maria do Espírito Santo, were killed on 24 May, six months after Ribeiro da Silva had predicted during an international environmental conference that he could be killed at any time. The activists were known for their vocal stance against illegal loggers, cattle ranchers and charcoal producers operating in Praia-Alta Piranheira, a remote Amazon settlement in Brazil's Para state, where they lived.

Nearly four months after the killings police in the Brazilian Amazon arrested two men. Police named the prisoners as José Rodrigues Moreira, who is accused of ordering the killings, and his brother Lindon Johnson Silva Rocha, who allegedly carried out the executions. José Cláudio Ribeiro da Silva told a TEDx conference in Manaus that he expected to be killed. "I will protect the forest at all costs. That is why I could get a bullet in my head at any moment," he said. Ribeiro da Silva's sister said, "We believe there are more people involved [in the murders]."

© 2012, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

Related Posts
The Persecution of Environmentalists
Cambodian Environmentalist Murdered
Who Bombed Judi Bari? (Video Trailer)
Environmental Problems and Activists Struggling Against Abuse (Video)
Another Amazon Environmentalist Killed (Video)
Environmentalists Murdered for Protecting the Amazon (Video)

Who Bombed Judi Bari? (Video Trailer)


Here is the Movie Trailer for a feature length documentary on the persecution of two California environmentalists. Who Bombed Judi Bari? is a suspenseful story about people who risked their lives to save the California redwoods and took on the FBI for trampling their freedom of speech. It shines a light on an amazing protest movement that succeeded against all odds - with creativity, music, and humor. In 1990, a bomb blew up in the car of two redwood activists, Judi Bari and Darryl Cherney. They were accused of bombing themselves, but twelve years later they won a landmark lawsuit against the FBI, proving that officers falsified evidence and intentionally tried to frame them. To date, the real bomber has never even been searched for and remains at-large. For more information about the film click here.

Related Posts
The Persecution of Environmentalists
Cambodian Environmentalist Murdered
Environmental Problems and Activists Struggling Against Abuse (Video)
Another Amazon Environmentalist Killed (Video)
Environmentalists Murdered for Protecting the Amazon (Video)
Murder of Two Environmentalists in the Amazon (Video)