Amazon rainforest fires: Brazil to reject $20m pledged by G7
A senior Brazilian official has told Emmanuel Macron
to take care of “his home and his colonies” as Brazil rejected an offer from G7
countries of $20m (£16m) to help fight fires in the Amazon.
“We appreciate [the offer], but maybe those
resources are more relevant to reforest Europe,” Onyx Lorenzoni, the chief of
staff to President Jair Bolsonaro, told the G1 news website.
Leaders of the G7 countries made the aid offer at a
weekend summit in the French city of Biarritz hosted by the French president,
who had put the fires high on the agenda. Environmental campaigners have
dismissed the sum as “chump change”.
“Macron cannot even avoid a foreseeable fire in a
church that is a world heritage site,” Lorenzoni said in a reference to the
blaze that devastated the Notre Dame cathedral in April. “What does he intend
to teach our country?
“Brazil is a democratic, free nation that never had
colonialist and imperialist practices, as perhaps is the objective of the
Frenchman Macron.”
Brazil’s environment minister, Ricardo Salles, had
earlier told reporters that his country welcomed the G7 funding, but after a
meeting between Bolsonaro and his ministers, the Brazilian government changed
course.
The announcement of the $20m assistance package was
the most concrete outcome of the three-day G7 summit of major industrialised
democracies in Biarritz and aimed to give money to Amazonian nations such as
Brazil and Bolivia, primarily to pay for more firefighting planes.
Tensions have risen between France and Brazil after
Macron tweeted that the fires burning in the Amazon basin amounted to an
international crisis and should be discussed as a top priority at the G7
summit. Bolsonaro reacted by accusing Macron of having a “colonialist
mentality”.
Speaking on French TV on Monday night, Macron
reiterated that the Amazon was a global issue and intensified his criticism of
Bolsonaro.
“We respect your sovereignty. It’s your country,”
Macron said. But the trees in the Amazon are “the lungs of the planet”, he
added.
“The Amazon forest is a subject for the whole
planet. We can help you reforest. We can find the means for your economic
development that respects the natural balance. But we cannot allow you to
destroy everything.”
He also acknowledged that Europe, by importing soya
from Brazil, was not without blame for the agricultural pressure on the
rainforest, saying: “We are partly complicit.”
The diplomatic row between the leaders had escalated
earlier in the day, when Macron condemned Bolsonaro for what he called
“extraordinarily rude” comments made about his wife, Brigitte, after the
Brazilian president expressed approval online for a Facebook post implying that
Brigitte Macron was not as good-looking as his own wife, Michelle.
“He has made some extraordinarily rude comments
about my wife,” Macron said at a press conference in Biarritz when asked to
react to statements about him by the Brazilian government. “What can I say?
It’s sad. It’s sad for him firstly, and for Brazilians,” he added.
Macron said he hoped for the sake of the Brazilian
people “that they will very soon have a president who behaves in the right
way”.
The US president, Donald Trump, skipped the summit
session aimed at finding solutions to global heating through tree planting and
shifting from fossil fuels to wind energy. In a press conference after the
summit, he was dismissive of efforts to change direction.
“I feel the US has tremendous wealth … I’m not going
to lose that wealth on dreams, on windmills – which, frankly, aren’t working
too well,” he said. “I think I know more about the environment than most.”
Environmental groups said G7’s emergency fire aid
was insufficient and failed to address the trade and consumption drivers of
deforestation.
“The offer of $20m is chump change, especially as
the crisis in the Amazon is directly linked to overconsumption of meat and
dairy in the UK and other G7 countries,” said Richard George, the head of
forests for Greenpeace UK.