Brazil denies Amazon logging link
Brazil's government has promised to investigate allegations
that its policy of settling landless communities in
the Amazon is encouraging deforestation.
Greenpeace has claimed that some of these areas are
being exploited by logging companies, after what it
says was an eight-month investigation.
Brazil's environment ministry says deforestation in
those areas is falling but it will investigate the claims.
The government says land distribution to the poor is
an important objective.
But Greenpeace says the implementation of the policy
is encouraging uncontrolled logging and deforestation
in some parts of the Amazon.
'Gross exploitation'
Greenpeace claims the government's land reform agency,
Incra, is setting aside areas for land settlement that
are of great value to the timber industry, instead of
placing people on land that has already been cleared.
Greenpeace says links are then encouraged between the
logging companies and unregulated groups representing
the settlers, which only facilitates what it calls "gross
exploitation" of the newly formed settlement.
The investigation focused on an area in the state of
Para, where more than 30,000 families were said to have
been settled in 2006 alone.
The allegation comes at a time when the government
is celebrating news that deforestation in the Amazon
in the 12 months to July 2006 fell by 25%.
Environment Minister Marina da Silva has promised the
claims will be fully investigated, but the government
says satellite images show deforestation in settlement
areas has been falling, not rising.