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VENEZUELA: Parrots and
Macaws Back at Home
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CARACAS - Nine yellow-crowned
parrots (Amazona ochrocephala) and one scarlet macaw
(Ara macao), all three months old, were repatriated
to Venezuela by authorities from the neighboring island
of Curacao, where they had been taken illegally.
''There had been 32 parrots, but more than half died
because of the poor conditions in which they were
transported. The Curacao officials found them at a
port with a load of illegal merchandise coming from
our country,'' Alexis Rengifo, head of the wildlife
division of Venezuela's Environment Ministry, told
Tierramérica.
In Curacao, the birds were quarantined while their
return to Venezuela was organized, and they were sent
to the Caricuao Zoo in Caracas, where ''they are gradually
recovering and under observation,'' zoo director Salvador
Boher said.
The authorities are looking for the people responsible
for this trafficking of birds and are working to fight
this crime in general. Trafficking of tropical animals
worldwide is an estimated 500 million dollar business
annually.
Venezuela is a party to the 1976 Convention on the
International Trade of Endangered Species of Wild
Fauna and Flora (CITES).
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CUBA: Hurricane Charley
No Relief for Drought
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HAVANA - Hurricane Charley, which
hit the western part of Cuba early in the morning
of Aug. 13, caused a great deal of destruction but
nothing to alleviate the island's ongoing drought.
''It didn't bring any water, and I lost all of my
banana and avocado trees,'' peasant farmer Pablo Castillo
told Tierramérica. The winds also destroyed the roof
of his house, located just outside the capital.
The rains did little to replenish the reservoirs surrounding
Havana, home to more than two million people.
Experts from the Meteorology Institute hope this year's
rainy season, from May to October, will see precipitation
near normal in eastern, central and western Cuba.
The drought is affecting the entire country, but particularly
the eastern provinces Camagüey, Las Tunas, Granma,
Holguín, Santiago de Cuba and Guantánamo.
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CHILE: Ecologists Demand
Land Regulation
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SANTIAGO - The non-governmental
organization Sustainable Chile is calling on the Ricardo
Lagos government to implement territorial regulation
based on national development goals, and has demanded
the withdrawal of a parliamentary bill that would
deregulate territorial planning that favors market
interests.
Sustainable Chile director Sara Larraín told a seminar
with lawmakers last week that the reforms of the Urbanism
and Construction Act would destroy ''any possibility
for strategic planning and regulation'' of Chilean
territory and would benefit a real estate focus based
on profits.
The reforms centralize the territorial use decisions
in the Ministry of Housing and Urban Development and
takes away the authority of other key entities, like
the ministries of agriculture and planning, the farming
and livestock service and the national forestry commission,
she said.
''Planning of national territory by the (Ministry
of) Housing is obviously a mistake, and contradicts
any notion of development. We are taking a step in
the wrong direction from the perspective of decentralized
and inter-disciplinary planning,'' said Larraín.
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BRAZIL: Unbeatable Record
for Aluminum Recycling
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RIO DE JANEIRO - Brazil leads
the way in recycling aluminum cans, with recovery
reaching 89 percent of the total produced in 2003,
surpassing Japan, which is second worldwide with 81.8
percent.
The South American giant has also seen strong performance
in recycling other materials, like glass, plastic
and paper.
But not when it comes to organic waste, which represents
55 percent of the weight of urban garbage, with just
1.5 percent being recycled, according to figures from
CEMPRE, a Brazilian association that promotes waste
reduction and recycling.
In the United States, organic waste represents 11.2
percent of all urban waste, and 59.3 percent of it
is recycled.
Poverty is a factor that favors recycling efforts
in Brazil, as it has become a source of income.
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GUATEMALA: Fungus Threatens
Cacao |
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GUATEMALA CITY - Cacao production
in Guatemala could be devastated if moniliasis reaches
the country, farmers warn the government. This plant
disease is caused by a fungus that attacks the cacao
bean and is already found in Honduras and El Salvador.
''As much as 80 percent of the cacao crops could be
lost in six of Guatemala's 22 departments,'' cacao
expert Erich Eger told Tierramérica. Guatemala produces
1,100 tons of dry cacao annually.
''In Honduras, the same thing happened. They thought
the fungus (Moniliophthota roreri) would never reach
them, but when it did, their production dropped 80
percent,'' he said.
Honduras produced 4,500 tons of cacao in 1997, but
just 900 tons in 2003.
Engineer Eduardo Hernández, of the Agriculture Ministry,
said the disease has not yet been reported in Guatemala,
but ''we know that in Honduras and El Salvador they
are reporting infected crops.''
The fungus was first found more than 100 years ago
in Ecuador, and primarily affects the fruit of the
cacao tree
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HONDURAS: NGOs and Military
United Against Disaster
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TEGUCIGALPA - More than 400 soldiers
from Latin America and representatives from 10 non-governmental
organizations from Europe, Africa and the United States,
began training Aug. 23 in disaster prevention, mine
clean-up, disarmament in conflict zones, and protection
of water sources.
Col. Gerardo Fuentes, of the Honduran armed forces,
told Tierramérica that the civilian-military actions
are part of the ''Honduras-North 2004'' exercise,
which aims to bring armies and civil society together
to share knowledge and to carry out ''joint operations
in cases of natural disaster.''
The initiative, under way in Tegucigalpa, is part
of the cooperative aid effort of the U.S. State Department
with Doctors Without Borders, the Catholic-based Caritas,
and other NGOs.
U.S. military officer David Robles told the local
press last week that one of the scenarios will be
how to protect potable water in arenas of conflict.
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