BRASILIA —
Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff Friday vetoed parts of a new forestry code
that environmentalists say would lead to further deforestation in the Amazon,
home to the world's largest collection of plants and animals.
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| Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff (AFP/File, Evaristo Sa) |
"The
president of the Republic decided in favor of carrying out diverse vetoes and
modifications to the draft law that deals with the forestry code,"
government lawyer Luis Inacio Adams told a news conference.
The
overhaul of the 1965 forestry law approved by Congress a month ago had been
seen as a victory for a powerful agri-business lobby after years of feuding
with environmentalists.
But it is
embarrassing for Brazil less than a month before it hosts the Rio+20 summit on
sustainable development.
Rousseff
removed 12 controversial articles and made 31 modifications to the bill which
was to be published Monday in a special executive measure that enters into
effect immediately, although it will have to be ratified later by the Congress.
Environment
Minister Izabella Teixeira said that in vetoing parts of the bill the
government was seeking to ensure that there was no loss of areas of the Amazon
and protected sensitive ecosystems.
She said
the government also acted to prevent amnesties for those who had illegally
cleared areas in the past, to preserve small landowners, and hold timber
producers responsible for protecting the environment.
The text to
be published Monday maintains the obligation to protect 80 percent of the
forest in rural areas of the Amazon and 35 percent of the sertao, or arid
hinterland of northeastern Brazil.
But it
eases restrictions for small landowners who face difficulties in recovering
illegally cleared land.
The veto
shows that Brazil "is a country determined to protect the environment
while continuing to produce food," Texeira said.
But
environmentalists who had pushed for a full veto were not pleased.
"Brazilian
and world public opinion sees a country which continues to play with the future
of its forests," said Maria Cecilia Wey de Brito, of the Brazilian branch
of the conservation group WWF.
"We
view the announcement of a partial veto with concern because we feel that a
large part of the points most harmful for the environment have been maintained
and only a few removed. In addition the veto will have to go through a Congress
dominated by the agribusiness sector," said Raul do Vale of the
Socioenvironmental institute (ISA).
On Thursday
the government was handed a petition calling for a full veto with more than two
million signatures collected online from dozens of countries.
The new law
has provoked fierce clashes between environmentalists and supporters of farmers
and ranchers over how to regulate the country's vast but vulnerable wilderness.
Brazil is a
major beef and soybean producer, and with international crop prices high and in
many cases rising, farmers are keen to cash in.
The bill
approved by Congress a month ago defines what part of the forest landowners in
the Amazon and other large ecosystems are responsible for protecting.
It shows
the two faces of Brazil: on the one hand, a giant agricultural producer and
exporter with nearly 28 percent of its territory under cultivation, and on the
other an environmental powerhouse with forests covering 60 percent of its
territory.
Agriculture
Minister Jorge Alberto Mendes Ribeiro said the presidential veto ensured that
the code reconciles the interests of both the environmentalists and the
powerful agribusiness sector.
The
decision comes only weeks before Brazil hopes to champion sustainable
development at the June 20-22 Rio+20 summit that will be attended by 115 world
leaders and 50,000 participants.

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