A team of climbers from our ship, the Arctic Sunrise, shut down
Cargill’s illegal soy facility in the heart of the Amazon rainforest.
Our activists unfurled a banner on the conveyor belts at Cargill’s
facility, but angry Cargill employees nearby blasted the sign down with
high-powered hoses, and the violence against our activists quickly
escalated. Police arrived on the scene and arrested 16 of our
activists, including one of our U.S. activists.
The Arctic Sunrise itself blockaded the Cargill port, preventing exports of soy from leaving the facility for several hours.
In the nearby city of Santarém, a group of Cargill’s supporters
surrounded the police station holding our activists, but were dispersed
by military police.
Police secured
the Arctic Sunrise as well, but an angry mob boarded our ship
despite the police presence, and painted graffiti along the sides.
Fireworks were also aimed at our ship and activists, even hitting an
activist in the chest, but fortunately leaving him unharmed. Meanwhile,
police used pepper spray to
force the crew to open the radio room, and took them into custody. The
rest of our activists remained in lockdown within the ship. Cargill tug boats pushed our ship out of
the dock, and dragged it and our anchor out into the
Tapajos river.
The illegal soy Cargill is producing has been linked to a massive fast food chain, including
KFC’s European restaurants. These fast food chains are literally eating up the Amazon, and we’ve detailed exactly how in a
recent report.
Cargill, based in Minneapolis, MN, is the largest soy producer and
exporter in the Amazon, operating 13 silos in the heart of the Amazon
rainforest.
Soy is now a leading cause of rainforest destruction in the Brazilian
Amazon. In total, an estimated 12,000 square miles of what was once
rainforest has already been destroyed, mostly illegally, to grow
soybeans. Cargill makes no secret of helping establish soy farms in the
Amazon, some of whom are complicit in other illegal activities such as
land grabbing and slavery.
Corporations like Cargill must stop seeing the Amazon as a place to
expand their soy businesses, and recognize it as the world’s greatest
rainforest in need of urgent protection, not exploitation. We’re calling on
Cargill, and the fast food industry they sell to, to ensure that the
soy and animal feed they buy and use does not contribute to the
destruction of the Amazon.