You can help save jaguars in Argentina with a phone call supporting our action right now.
On Monday, July 26th, nine Greenpeace activists, including five
'jaguars', located bulldozers in Salta, on the border of the Great
Chaco and Yungas forests. They climbed onto the machines and used
chains to lock them. Days later, these bulldozers are still
immobilized, and other 'jaguars' are on the prowl for more.
Update August 1st: The Greenpeace
Jaguars have left the forest for now, but we'll be back. The
campaign won't end until we have a moratorium on forest
destruction. Your phone
call can still help pressure the president of Argentina to take
positive action.
Update July 30th: In Argentina, the government has been turning
off their phone exchanges. In the forest, bulldozer operators
stopped their operations and attempted to hide their equipment to
avoid our motorbiking activists. And embassies the world over
continued to field calls from cyberactivists and try to route them
toward email responses to lessen the administrative burden. Here's
a sample of the press
coverage the action has been getting the world over, along with
high-resolution images and news from the forest. But what has
the president of Argentina done to ensure a moratorium?
Update
July 29th: During their latest prowl our jaguars tracked down five
more bulldozers clear cutting and burning the forest. Using their
motorbikes they intercepted the bulldozers and blocked their path
to the forest thus ending today's planned destruction. The machines
have been locked up with chains and 'Blocked by Greenpeace' is now
stamped on all the diggers. Monday's bulldozers are also still
locked up so, all in all, our prowlers have managed to immobilize
eight bulldozers.
Update July 28th: The Jaguars have now been at it for more than
72 hours -- they have immobilized bulldozers, sparked press
attention in Argentina, and been supported by more than 5000
phone calls to Argentine embassies the world over. The
Argentine embassy in the UK reported to one caller they'd had 14
calls in a half hour about the issue: let's keep the pressure
up!
Here are some excerpts from the
message which our activist Emiliano sent to our cyberactivists
worldwide:

And we're off! The motorbike-riding Greenpeace Jaguars have just
gone into action. The bulldozers are moving in, but the volunteers
on their motorbikes are blocking them. We're stopping them from
destroying the whole forest!!!!
Call your Argentine embassy now, and ask that the President of
Argentina, Néstor Kirchner, introduce a moratorium on
deforestation. Then please let us know what the embassy said.
In Argentina, 75 percent of our native forests have already
disappeared, and every hour the equivalent of 20 football pitches
(soccer fields, for you North Americans) of forest is destroyed to
grow transgenic soya. The damage is irreversible, it is almost
impossible to grow forest on the soil again - and today an area the
size of Germany is at risk. In the last month, a provincial
government has already sold off a natural reserve to companies
planning to sow genetically engineered (GE) soya, an unprecedented
act. This cannot carry on! That's why the Greenpeace Jaguars have
gone into action to defend north-west Argentina's remaining
forest.
I'm also asking if you could send on this email to your closest
contacts and friends, to those who share with you the desire to
defend the forest, in every corner of the world. The participation
via email of many people like you has succeeded before in stopping
other cases of deforestation. This time too, we're going to
win!
Please help us. The destruction of the forests in north-west
Argentina means the loss of thousands of animal and plant species,
the degredation of the soil and its contamination thanks to the use
of pesticides, as well as hundreds of indigenous and local people
losing their homes.
Ask President Kirchner to declare a moratorium on deforestation
for the entire country! I know I can count on your
participation.
Emiliano Ezcurra Forest Campaign Coordinator Greenpeace Argentina
|
"We're here to stop these jaguar forests being destroyed and the
land turned into a genetically engineered soya desert," Emiliano
said from the Yungas forest.
People being evicted, going hungry, for European steak and hamburgers
The Yungas Rainforest and the Great Chaco American forest are
two neighbouring ecosystems. They are rich in biodiversity and
wildlife, such as rare jaguars. They are being destroyed at one of
the fastest rates in the world -- in order to grow soya for animal
feed.
The forest had been destroyed for agriculture for years, but the
rate of destruction has accelerated since 1996, when Monsanto
introduced GE soya beans into Argentina. Since then, the country
has extended its agricultural frontiers to grow GE soya for export
as animal feed, at the expense of its threatened forests, wildlife
and the homes and livelihoods of many people.
Ramón
Ferriera, who lives in the Great Chaco forest, said: "They force us
to leave our land, often with guns. Then they come with these
powerful machines, knock down all the trees, burn them and plant
soya. We see no economic benefit from such great destruction and we
lose all we have."
Emiliano Ezcurra says "People go hungry while their land is used
to grow soya to feed cows, pigs and chickens... This environmental
and social abuse is totally unacceptable. The Argentinean
Government must stop the forest destruction and give people who
live in the forest the legal right to their land."
Take Action
More information
Read more about the unique biodiversity which is being destroyed
in the
Yungas Rainforest and the Great Chaco American forest.
| See the Greenpeace
Jaguars in action: |
|
View Quicktime (16.1 MBytes)
View Real (8.0 MBytes)
View Windows Media (8.7 MBytes) |
|