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GUATEMALA: Agrarian Debate
Begins
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GUATEMALA CITY - The Guatemalan
government and leaders of the peasant group Plataforma
Agraria (PA) will take part in dialogue to seek solutions
to rural land conflicts and discuss policies for developing
the countryside.
"Two commissions will be set up to study and develop
solutions to the agrarian problem, which has been
historic and a leading cause of the poverty" that
affects 80 percent of the country's 11.2 million inhabitants,
PA spokeswoman Ursula Roldán told Tierramérica.
Four representatives of the Oscar Berger administration
and four from the PA will comprise the first commission,
to discuss the legal matters related to labor and
land conflicts, including land takeovers.
The second commission, with the same make up, "will
have a longer-term task, because they will have to
discuss an integral policy for rural development"
in a country where 85 percent of farmable land is
in the hands of one percent of the population, said
Roldán.
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HONDURAS: Binational Project
to Protect Birds
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TEGUCIGALPA - U.S. and Honduran
scientists will work together over the next three
years to study and protect migratory birds, including
the tiny golden-cheeked warbler (Dendroica chrysoparia),
whose habitat is 1,800 meters above sea level in encino
pine trees.
Experts from Tegucigalpa and from the Audubon Zoo,
in the southern U.S. city of New Orleans, will track
the migratory behavior of birds that travel between
the southeast United States and the Honduran reserves
of La Tigra National Park, Corralitos, El Picacho
and Amarateca Valley.
Also taking part is a group from the Autonomous National
University of Honduras, Jonathan Laínez, of the capital's
environmental management division, told Tierramérica.
The aim is to establish the timing and routes of migration,
and the status of the forests they use for nesting
in order to define measures to prevent the extinction
of these bird species.
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COSTA RICA: Mangroves
on the Verge
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SAN JOSE - Costa Rican scientists
and environmentalists say the country's mangroves,
on the Pacific and Caribbean coasts, are on the verge
of collapse despite the numerous regulations in place
to protect them.
The continued harvesting of mollusks, fish and crustaceans,
the logging of trees and construction of canals and
ponds have taken a heavy toll on the mangroves, say
experts from the National University.
The National University, Environment Ministry, National
System for Conservation, and National Wetlands Program
presented the government with an "integral proposal
for optimal management of those areas, considering
it is necessary to interrelate administrative and
juridical aspects" with other elements of vital importance
for protecting this unique ecosystem.
University expert Juan Bravo said the mangroves are
important for fishing as sources of the white shrimp
(Penaeus vannamei), anchovetas (Engraulis ringens)
and red porgy (Sparus pagrus), among others.
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BRAZIL: People's Trial
on Transgenics
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RIO DE JANEIRO - An International
People's Tribunal on Transgenics held sessions in
the southern Brazilian city of Porto Alegre on Mar.
11, finding genetically modified soy "guilty".
Although the trial was informal, it was presided by
a real judge, José Felipe Ledur of Brazil.
The accused -- the U.S. biotech giant Monsanto, which
holds the patent to the genetically engineered RoundUp
Ready (RR) soy, and the Federation of Agriculture
of the southern Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul
-- were found ''guilty of illegally disseminating
transgenic seeds.''
They ''endangered the environment, biodiversity, human
health, the country's agricultural genetic wealth,
and the Brazilian economy,'' according to the final
ruling.
The sentence -- which is non-binding -- also states
that not enough research has been carried out yet
to ensure that transgenic crops and food pose no environmental
or health risks.
Genetically modified soy now accounts for 80 percent
of all soy planted in the Brazilian state of Rio Grande
do Sul, and has spread to other parts of the country,
reflecting the failure of authorities to enforce the
existing ban.
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VENEZUELA: Canada Gives
a Hand to Caracas Sanitation
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CARACAS - Canada will contribute
a half-million dollars to build wastewater systems
in poor districts of the Venezuelan capital, says
the Canadian ambassador Allan Culham.
The Venezuelan government will put up 100,000 dollars
for the initiative.
"In 700 neighborhoods around Caracas, wastewater drains
an average of three meters from houses. To channel
them, it is essential to build collectors," said Jacqueline
Farías, president of the public enterprise Hidrocapital.
The highly contaminated Guiarie River, which runs
72 km west to east across the southern part of the
city, currently receives most of the sewage. The authorities'
ultimate aim is to clean up the river, said Farías.
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CHILE: Proposal for Mining
to Pay for Forests
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SANTIAGO - The executive director
of the Chilean Forestry Research Institute, Roberto
Ipinza, proposed that a portion of the income tax
revenues from mining operations should be earmarked
for forest development.
Debate began in 2003 about charging royalties to the
transnational companies that produce two-thirds of
the copper exports from Chile, the world's leading
producer of the red metal.
"Mexico and Chile are the only traditional mining
countries that still don't impose a royalty," said
Ipinza, addressing the Global Biotechnology Forum
this month. |