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Greenpeace activists seal the entrance to Madrid's Queen Sofia Museum and declare it a forest crime scene. Greenpeace discovered that the museum's newly opened extension has been built using timber bought from companies involved in the illegal logging of the Amazon rainforest.
Enlarge ImageToday's
action followed the discovery that the museum's newly opened extension
has been built using timber bought from companies involved in the
illegal logging of the Amazon rainforest (1).
Greenpeace
International forest campaigner, Belinda Fletcher, said: "Illegal
logging is out of control in the Amazon. It's a disgrace that the
Spanish Government is spending public money on fuelling this corrupt
trade in stolen rainforest timber."
The
Queen Sofia Museum is one of the best known in Spain and houses
Picasso's Guernica. Designed by the architect Jean Nouvel, it has been
extended over the last three years by the Spanish construction company
Dragados/ACS. The timber species (jatoba) used in the library,
exhibition rooms, auditorium and offices comes from Pará State, the
most extensively logged region of the Amazon. (2)
Life
on Earth depends on ancient forests. They are the richest, most diverse
habitats and help stabilize climate. They are also home to millions of
indigenous and forest dwelling people. Seventeen per cent of the Amazon
has been completely wiped out over the past 30 years (3), and even more
has been damaged by destructive logging. Today, it is estimated that
between 60 to 80 per cent of logging in the Brazilian Amazon is
illegal.
"It's
absurd that it's illegal to import stolen works of art into the EU, but
it's not illegal to import stolen wood to build a museum like this. If
the EU does not act to stop the illegal timber trade, the world's
ancient forests and the life they support will disappear forever," said
Fletcher.
Greenpeace
is calling on European governments to outlaw all imports of illegal
timber and to promote environmentally and socially responsible forest
management worldwide. (4)
Greenpeace
is an independent campaigning organization, which uses non-violent,
creative communication tools to put the spotlight on global
environmental problems, and to drive towards solutions essential for a
green and peaceful future.
(1) Documents provided to Greenpeace by the museum show that the timber was imported by the Spanish company 'Maderas Besteiro'. This company purchased the timber from three Brazilian companies; Madeireira São Marcos; Serraria Sao Jose; and Serraria Santa Clara. All these companies have been involved in illegal logging in Pará State and have been fined by IBAMA, the federal agency responsible for environmental issues and forest conservation in Brazil.
(2) Greenpeace has released a report of its findings at the museum in Spanish at www.greenpeace.es. An English summary is available at http://www.greenpeace.org/queensofiamuseum
(3) INPE in www.obt.inpe.br/prodes/index.html
(4) Illegal logging and related trade is scheduled for discussion at the Agriculture Council of the EU next week, 24-25th October 2005.
Images of today's action and the Amazon rainforest are available from Greenpeace International on request. Photos: John Novis on (M) +31 6 5381 9121 Video: Hester van Meurs on (M) +31 6 2900 1135