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- <text id=92TT0949>
- <title>
- Apr. 27, 1992: Endangered Species
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Endangered Earth Updates
- Apr. 27, 1992 The Untold Story of Pan Am 103
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ENVIRONMENT, Page 48
- Endangered Species
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>No, not owls or elephants. Humans who fight to save the planet
- are putting their lives on the line.
- </p>
- <p>By Anastasia Toufexis --Reported by Hannah Bloch/New York, Ian
- McCluskey/Rio de Janeiro and Anita Pratap/New Delhi
- </p>
- <p> For most people interested in protecting the environment,
- the costs of activism are measured by a little time and a
- little money. Attend an Earth Day rally, write a check, recycle
- the trash--that's about all it takes. But for some of the
- most determined defenders, the commitment--and the costs--can be much higher. Around the world, more and more
- ecoactivists are paying with pain and peril, and sometimes their
- lives.
- </p>
- <p> Chico Mendes, the Brazilian organizer who was assassinated
- in 1988 by ranchers for trying to preserve the Amazon forests
- for small-scale rubber tappers, remains the best known of the
- ecomartyrs, but his case is far from unique. In many countries,
- crusaders bring down the wrath of private interest groups,
- government agencies and even fellow citizens, and endure abuse
- ranging from intimidation and arrests to beatings and murder.
- "It's not at all unusual to have someone threatened or harassed
- in some way," says Pat Costner, director of toxics research for
- Greenpeace U.S.A. "It happens more often than not."
- </p>
- <p> Costner, who testifies at public hearings on the hazards
- of waste incinerators, became a target herself last year. She
- returned home one night and discovered that her home and office
- near Eureka Springs, Ark., had burned to the ground. Lost in
- the fire were valuable reference materials and reports. At
- first police ignored her request for an investigation; they got
- moving after arson detectives hired by Greenpeace found an empty
- fuel can in her burned-out living room. But no one has been
- charged in the case.
- </p>
- <p> Stephanie McGuire has a more harrowing tale. The Florida
- activist has threatened to sue Procter & Gamble, charging that
- a company pulp mill has polluted the water around the town of
- Perry. Two weeks ago, she was attacked at her remote fishing
- camp by three men who beat her and burned her with a cigar. The
- men cut her on the cheek and chest and poured water from the
- contaminated river on the wounds, taunting her, she says, with
- the words "This is what you get for trying to make us lose our
- jobs." P&G denies any connection with the assault but has
- offered a $5,000 reward for the apprehension of McGuire's
- attackers.
- </p>
- <p> Judi Bari, a member of the radical group Earth First!, is
- still hurting from the explosion in 1990 of a pipe bomb in her
- Subaru station wagon. The Oakland blast left her with a
- paralyzed right foot and a dislocated spine. Earth First! is
- known for tactics that sometimes endanger the safety of loggers,
- though Bari insists that she is against violence. Authorities
- arrested her on suspicion that she knowingly transported the
- bomb, but no charges were brought. Bari claims that officials
- have failed to investigate the case seriously, and has filed a
- civil rights suit against the Oakland police and the FBI.
- </p>
- <p> For Canada's Colleen McCrory, the torment has been mostly
- emotional and financial. In her two decades of crusading against
- the clear-cutting of forests in British Columbia, she has
- endured a smear campaign by the pro-logging newsletter Red Neck
- News, the beating of a friend and the vilifying of her three
- children at school. A high school dropout and divorced mother,
- McCrory supported her family on income from a small clothing
- store she ran in her hometown of New Denver, which sits in the
- shadows of the Valhalla mountains, part of a spectacular range
- thickly forested by ancient trees. A three-year boycott
- organized by logging advocates forced her out of business in
- 1985 and deep into debt. Says McCrory, who founded Canada's
- Future Forests Alliance, which calls for the setting aside of
- 12% of the land as wilderness: "The scars remain on us, and in
- the town."
- </p>
- <p> Persecution of activists appears to be worst in developing
- countries, where environmentalism has become entwined with the
- struggle to ensure basic rights for the underprivileged and
- disenfranchised. There is new recognition that the livelihood
- of millions of native people and other rural populations depends
- on the protection of their environment. In Malaysia, logging
- destroys the hunting and fishing of the indigenous peoples,
- including the Penan and Kelabit. In Brazil, ranchers, loggers
- and gold miners menace Amazon tribes. In India, the huge dams
- and power plants that the government has favored to foster
- industrial growth have displaced millions of peasants. The
- issue, says Sunderlal Bahuguna, who is fighting to halt
- construction of India's Tehri dam project, is "not development
- vs. environment. It is extinction vs. survival."
- </p>
- <p> Since the environmental battle has economic and social
- dimensions, ecoactivists have forged natural alliances with
- political groups such as trade unions, women's organizations and
- civil liberties proponents. Kenya's Wangari Maathai, creator of
- the Green Belt movement, which has planted 10 million trees
- worldwide, has helped found the new Forum for the Restoration
- of Democracy, a group opposed to the regime of President Daniel
- arap Moi. She is now leading a hunger strike by mothers who are
- fasting for the release of political prisoners.
- </p>
- <p> Ecoactivists' bolder profile has led to crackdowns by
- governments and their supporters, who see the agitation as a
- major challenge to their power and plans. Last month the chief
- minister in Sarawak, a Malaysian state, labeled logging
- opponents "traitors," a charge increasingly leveled at
- protesters. Another name commonly given them is "ecoterrorists."
- </p>
- <p> That may be a fair description of some activists who have
- crossed the line between agitation and lawlessness. In the U.S.,
- for instance, members of the radical Earth First! allegedly
- poured sand in bulldozer gas tanks and drilled dangerous metal
- spikes into trees marked for chopping. But most environmental
- protesters endorse more traditional, nonviolent tactics.
- Activists maintain that they violate laws as a last resort and
- usually only when the law has been misused or formulated to
- crush opposition.
- </p>
- <p> Whatever their tactics, the crusaders often find
- themselves in serious trouble. Some examples:
- </p>
- <p>-- Kenya's Maathai is facing trial on charges of
- publishing "a false rumor which is likely to alarm the public,"
- namely that the Moi government was planning to hand over power
- to the military. Last month, during a protest by fasting mothers
- of political prisoners, she was tear-gassed and clubbed
- unconscious by police. In January more than 100 police officers
- swarmed her house in Nairobi and arrested her. A night in jail
- with no mattress or blankets so aggravated her rheumatism that
- she was hospitalized for several days after her release.
- </p>
- <p> A winner of the Goldman Environmental Prize last year,
- Maathai interweaves her new political activities with her old
- fight to preserve Kenya's land. Her opposition to a plan by the
- ruling party and the late Robert Maxwell to build a 62-story
- office building on the site of Nairobi's Uhuru Park frightened
- away other foreign investors and scuttled the project. She also
- led the outcry against destruction of 20 hectares (50 acres) of
- forest on Nairobi's outskirts so that roses could be grown for
- export. Maathai countered official claims that the site
- contained no indigenous trees with a photograph of herself in
- the cleared forest, clinging to the stump of a recently felled
- giant hardwood.
- </p>
- <p>-- Malaysia's Anderson Mutang, founder of the Sarawak
- Indigenous People's Alliance, is scheduled to go on trial in
- September for operating an illegal organization. In the past six
- years, Mutang, a native Kelabit who grew up in Sarawak's
- forests, has directed six blockades of logging roads. Arrested
- in February, he was released on bail after four weeks, including
- 10 days in solitary confinement in a windowless room. During his
- imprisonment, he says, three pairs of police officers questioned
- him for seven or eight hours a day, sometimes until 4 a.m. His
- interrogators, who threatened him with torture, demanded the
- names of associates and explanations of notes in his confiscated
- files.
- </p>
- <p>-- India's Medha Patkar is a passionate critic of big dam
- projects, especially the one scheduled for the Narmada Valley,
- which will submerge 245 villages and uproot 100,000 people.
- Taking a leaf from Mahatma Gandhi's book, she has organized
- hunger strikes, demonstrations, sit-ins, roadblocks and rallies.
- A measure of her success: the World Bank has ordered an
- independent review of the environmental impact of the Narmada
- dam and plans for resettling villagers, prompting foreign
- investors to delay releasing fresh funds.
- </p>
- <p> For her protests, Patkar has been beaten, arrested and
- banned from several villages. The former Bombay social worker
- faces 10 or so trials on offenses ranging from arson to
- kidnapping government officials. Patkar claims that the charges
- are trumped up and that she advocates only nonviolent civil
- disobedience.
- </p>
- <p>-- In Brazil, dozens of activists, including rural labor
- leaders, native Indians and priests, have been beaten and shot,
- allegedly by the hirelings of ranchers, logging companies, gold
- miners and other interests. On top of all this, activists
- contend, the justice system serves only the interests of the
- rich and powerful. In February a state appeals court in Acre
- overturned--on grounds of insufficient evidence--the
- conviction of rancher Darly Alves da Silva for his participation
- in the Chico Mendes murder and ordered a retrial. "The
- conviction was the first time an executor of a crime against an
- activist was brought to justice," says Sueli Bellato, one of the
- prosecuting attorneys in the Mendes case. "The reversal is an
- incentive to continue the killing."
- </p>
- <p> Many activists contend that they are on freely circulating
- "hit lists." Gumercindo Rodrigues, an adviser to Mendes'
- National Council of Rubber Tappers, is recovering from two
- gunshot wounds he suffered last September. Gumercindo was shot
- on a main street in Rio Branco, the Acre state capital. One shot
- in the back at point-blank range came from a police officer.
- Press accounts have also implicated Camilo Yunes Junior, a
- lumber baron, in the shooting. Yunes denies any involvement. No
- charges have been filed in what the courts have dismissed as a
- crime of passion because Gumercindo was involved with the timber
- merchant's wife. Gumercindo points out that the woman had been
- separated from her husband for several months.
- </p>
- <p> In another incident last September, Antonio Batista de
- Macedo, who has been organizing Indians and rural workers into
- cooperatives and trade unions in western Acre, escaped death
- only when an assassin's gun failed to fire. Last December, Joao
- Bosco dos Santos Freire, who had been mobilizing rubber tappers
- in Tarauaca, Acre, was ambushed and killed, allegedly by the son
- of a landowner, who has not been charged. In January the
- president of the Tarauaca rural workers union was almost killed
- when two gunmen invaded his home.
- </p>
- <p> Is there a way to prevent abuses? The best method may be
- to arouse global indignation. To that end, Amnesty
- International publishes regular notices of outrages against
- environmental activists. "The only kind of protection that these
- people have is for their enemies to be made aware that if they
- commit a crime, there will be a big repercussion that will
- embarrass the government," observes Marcio Santilli, executive
- secretary of the Nucleus for Indigenous Rights in Brasilia. U.S.
- Senator Albert Gore this month introduced a congressional
- resolution that calls on the U.S. government to apply pressure
- on Malaysia to uphold the human rights of indigenous peoples.
- New Zealand has gone further: it has said it will stop importing
- tropical woods from places where there is uncontrolled logging.
- </p>
- <p> "We feel we have the international community with us,"
- says Malaysia's Mutang. That is some small comfort when he is
- alone in a dark cell. But the real satisfaction will come when
- his efforts--and those of hundreds of courageous men and
- women like him--begin to turn back the forces destroying
- earth's irreplaceable natural resources.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-