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Brazil's Bolsonaro hits back at Biden over rainforest
By Jordi MIRO
Bras�lia (AFP) Sept 30, 2020

Treetop protests in Roald Dahl forest against UK rail line
London (AFP) Oct 1, 2020 - Environmental campaigners demonstrated on the London streets and in tree-tops in the English countryside on Thursday against the construction of a new high-speed train line.

Police removed 15 activists who had climbed trees in woodland in Buckinghamshire, north of London, which are said to have inspired the fantasy world of Roald Dahl's children's books, while another group marched on parliament.

The HS2 project, which could cost up to �100 billion ($130 billion, 115 billion euros), will be Britain's second high-speed line after HS1 -- used by Eurostar in southeast England.

It will link London to the cities of central and northern England but it has caused outrage as its projected route cuts through swathes of countryside.

The HS2 Rebellion group accused British Prime Minister Boris Johnson of "hypocrisy" for approving the project in February while saying he was committed to protecting biodiversity.

"It's a huge amount of money spent on destroying the environment for a very very small benefit," London protester Eilidh Murray, 65, told AFP.

She said the authorities "should improve the infrastructure we've got instead".

Another demonstrator, Vania Flaccomio, 27, said the project "does not make any sense in a climate emergency".

The British parliament declared an environmental and climate emergency in a vote last year.

Outside London, treehouse protesters clashed with police in a woodland said to have inspired Dahl's 1970 children's book "Fantastic Mr Fox".

Dahl, who died in 1990, lived in the Buckinghamshire village of Great Missenden, where there is now a museum to his life and work.

Steve Masters, 50, said he had slept in a makeshift treehouse every night for the past three months to try to stop construction of the rail line destroying the wood.

He said he wanted his three grandchildren to "grow up safe from the effects of climate change" and to protect "the literary memory of Roald Dahl and all those childhood memories".

Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro lashed out Wednesday at Joe Biden for the US Democratic presidential candidate's "disastrous and unnecessary" comments on the destruction of the Amazon rainforest in his first debate with Donald Trump.

Bolsonaro, who has been dubbed a "Tropical Trump" and openly admires the US president, told Biden Brazil would not accept "coward threats towards our territorial and economic integrity."

The row came after Biden name-checked Brazil at Tuesday's debate as he attacked Trump's record on the environment and foreign policy.

"The rainforests of Brazil are being torn down," Biden said.

"I would be gathering up and making sure we had the countries of the world coming up with $20 billion, and say, 'Here's $20 billion. Stop tearing down the forest. And if you don't, then you're going to have significant economic consequences.'"

Bolsonaro, a far-right climate-change skeptic who took office in January 2019, did not take kindly to the plan.

"As the head of state who has brought Brazil-US relations closer than ever before, after decades of governments that were unfriendly towards the US, it is really difficult to understand such a disastrous and unnecessary declaration," he wrote on Twitter.

"What a shame, Mr John Biden!" he added, mistaking the former vice president's first name in the English version of his tweet.

Bolsonaro has presided over a surge of deforestation and wildfires in the world's biggest rainforest.

Last year, his first in office, deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon increased 85.3 percent, setting a new record, with a total area nearly the size of Lebanon lost.

The wildfires that devastated the rainforest last year triggered international outcry, forcing Bolsonaro onto the defensive. He ultimately deployed the army to the Amazon to fight the fires.

So far this year, the deforestation rate is down by about five percent, though the number of fires has increased 13 percent, to 75,362.

The Brazilian leader however defended his government's "unprecedented action to protect the Amazon and safeguard our environment."

- 'Environmental crimes' -

Returning to his playbook from last year's fire crisis, Bolsonaro said Brazil's sovereignty was being threatened by foreign interests keen on the Amazon's natural resources.

"The greed of some countries towards the Amazon is a well-known fact. However, the explicit demonstration of this greed by someone who is running for the presidency of his country is a clear sign of contempt for cordial and fruitful coexistence," he wrote.

"OUR SOVEREIGNTY IS NON-NEGOTIABLE."

Later, in a video address to a UN biodiversity summit, Bolsonaro said Brazil was "firm in its commitment to sustainable development and preserving our environmental wealth."

He accused "certain non-governmental organizations" of perpetrating "environmental crimes" to stain the country's image.

Bolsonaro has called environmental groups a "cancer" for attacking his policies, which include pushing for protected Amazon lands to be opened to mining and agriculture.

But he also faces growing pressure on the issue from allies, trading partners, international investors and powerful voices in the business world.

In June, 29 global investment firms managing nearly $4 trillion in assets sent an open letter to Bolsonaro, urging him to change policies blamed for accelerating the destruction of the rainforest.

Environmental destruction by Brazilian agribusiness firms is also threatening a long-sought trade deal between the European Union and the Mercosur bloc, of which Brazil is a member.


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