"An environmental campaigner is killed every week in Brazil."
"No one could accuse Nilcilene Miguel de Lima of being easily afraid. When loggers beat her and burned down her home in Lábrea – in the heart of the Brazilian Amazon – the environmental activist refused to give up her struggle. When they killed her dog and frightened away the armed guards who had been sent to protect her, she carried on without them. But after they murdered her fellow campaigners and warned her she would be next, the mother of four finally fled.
Today, she is in hiding hundreds of miles from home, looking out of the bars on the window of a temporary refuge in Manaus and wondering what happened to Brazilian justice and the world's interest in protecting the planet's greatest rainforest. "I'll be hiding for the rest of my life. The people who killed my friends and destroyed nature should be the ones in prison, but I'm the one who has no liberty," she says. "All I ever did was protect the families who tried to conserve the environment."
That is an increasingly dangerous ambition in Brazil where, according to a recent report by Global Witness, more environmental and land-rights campaigners have been killed than the rest of the world put together. The study found that, on average, one activist has been killed in the country every week since 2002. If that trend continues, four will die during the course of this World Cup, though very few cases are likely to make headlines."
Jonathan Watts and Karina Vieira report for the Guardian June 14, 2014.
"Dying To Save the Amazonian Rainforest"
Source: Guardian, 06/17/2014