Illegal loggers blamed for murder of Peru forest campaigner
Authorities confirm killing of Edwin Chota and three other men, with reports saying they were shot in front of villagers
Dan Collyns in Lima
theguardian.com, Monday 8 September 2014 23.01 EDT
Illegal loggers are being blamed for the murder of four Asheninka natives including a prominent anti-logging campaigner, Edwin Chota, near the Peruvian frontier with Brazil.
Authorities in Peru have confirmed that Chota, the leader of Alto Tamaya-Saweto, a community in Perus Amazon Ucayali region, fought for his peoples right to gain titles to their land and expel illegal loggers who raided their forests on the Brazilian border. He featured in reports by National Geographic and the New York Times that detailed how death threats were made against him and members of his community.
This is a terribly sad outcome. And the saddest part is that it was a foreseen event, said Julia Urrunaga, Peru director for the Environmental Investigation Agency, an international conservation group. It was widely known that Edwin Chota and other leaders from the Alto Tamaya-Saweto community were asking for protection from the Peruvian authorities because they were receiving death treats from the illegal loggers operating in their area.
~snip~
Edwin Chotas widow and other villagers travelled for six days by river to come here to report this crime, Perus vice minister of intercultural affairs, Patricia Balbuena, told the Guardian. She had travelled to the regional capital, Pucallpa, to further investigate the case.
~snip~
A 2012 World Bank report estimated that as much as 80% of Perus logging exports are harvested illegally [PDF] and investigations have revealed that the wood is typically laundered using doctored papers to make it appear legal and ship it out of the country; while a 2012 report by the Environmental Investigation Agency indicated at least 40% of official cedar exports to the US included illegally logged timber.
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/sep/09/illegal-loggers-blamed-for-of-peru-forest-campaigner