Mexico's 'devastating' forest loss
Deforestation -- which environmentalists say is one of the most
pressing concerns affecting the planet -- will top the agenda at a United
Nations meeting of environment ministers in New York on Monday.
(BBC)
BBC Central America and Caribbean correspondent
March 4, 2002
By Nick Miles
Deforestation -- which environmentalists say is one of the most pressing
concerns affecting the planet -- will top the agenda at a United Nations
meeting of environment ministers in New York on Monday.
Mexico is one of the world's worst affected countries. Depletion of forest
cover is taking place twice as fast than previously thought, with more than
one million hectares being lost each year.
The forests around the town have been devastated by small scale logging. A
number of initiatives to resolve the problem -- including the eviction of
illegal settlers from protected forest land -- have been announced by
President Vicente Fox.
But environmentalists say the settlers are just a scapegoat and the
government is ignoring the real problem, illegal wood cutting.
According to a recently published government report, Mexico now has the
second fastest rate of deforestation in the world, second only to Brazil.
The jungle is in an area of high biodiversity
Nowhere is the deforestation worse than in the southern state of Chiapas.
In the south east corner of Chiapas lies the Lacandon jungle, a million
hectares of, until recently, pristine tropical forest.
It's one of the most biologically diverse places on the planet home to rare
parrots, jaguars and hundreds of species of hardwood trees.
From the air the damage caused by logging and illegal farming settlements is
plain to see. The light coloured maize fields form a patchwork amongst the
bottle green expanse of tropical forest.
"The farmers here have no right to the land, it is a reserve," state
government forestry advisor Hernan Alfonzo told me as we come in to land at
a small airstrip cut out of the jungle
"It's not just the land they grow crops on that's lost," he said. "Thousands
of hectares of forest go up in smoke every year as the fires they light to
clear their land rage out of control."
Suspicion
Landing at the hamlet of San Gregorio we are greeted with understandable
suspicion by the inhabitants.
San Gregorio is home to 50 families. Until 20 years ago they were farm
labourers working in the north of the state, but they lost their jobs when
much of the area was turned over to cattle raising and their labour was no
longer needed.
"The people here are threatened by the government with eviction all the
time," said Antonio Jimenez, who heads an organisation representing the
forest farmers.
"They literally have nowhere else to go, and they don't create the
environmental havoc the government says they do, they protect the
environment, it's in their interests to do so," he added.
The claim is backed up by environmentalists working in the area.
"The farmers here are cultivating in a sustainable way," said botanist
Miguel Angel Garcia. "They no longer need to destroy more and more of the
forest because their fields remain productive."
'Smokescreen'
There is a growing body of opinion that the government's focus on removing
the settlers from their land is simply a smokescreen deflecting attention
from the widespread illegal logging going on across the country.
Development worker Ryan Zinn working near the town of San Cristobal has been
studying the problem.
Illegal logging is on the increase
"The forests around the town have been devastated by small scale logging
concessions," he told me, as we stood in a recently cut area of the forest.
"The municipal governments hand out permits illegally to local consortia. In
many cases what we see are not huge logging companies but the middle men of
the intermediaries who are causing much of the deforestation," Mr Zinn said.
Huge task
It's a problem the federal government acknowledges. "We're working to bring
an end to the corruption," said Hernan Alfonzo. "Corruption has been endemic
amongst officials because of the low salaries of the inspectors and the big
profits to be made. "We're now putting in place teams of new inspectors to
check all the wood leaving the state," he added. This, however is a massive
task. The agency has just a hundred inspectors having to cover an area of
about a hundred thousand square miles. Even if the will to protect the
environment in this part of southern Mexico is there, the finance to bring
about change is lagging far behind.