Brussels (AFP) - Hundreds of activist groups on Tuesday urged the EU to "immediately halt negotiations" for a trade deal with Mercosur countries over Brazil's alleged harm of its indigenous people and rainforests.
The appeal
from more than 340 groups could further complicate the European Union's bid to
conclude 20 years of talks for a free trade agreement with Brazil and its
Mercosur partners Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay.
In an open
letter, Greenpeace as well as an array of NGOs across Europe and Latin America
reminded the EU it had previously suspended trade preferences with Myanmar and
the Philippines over alleged human rights abuses.
"It is
time that the EU takes a similar, tough stance to prevent a deterioration of
the human rights and environmental situation in Brazil," the letter said.
"We
therefore call on you to immediately halt negotiations for an EU-Mercosur free
trade agreement," it added.
It urged
Brussels to "guarantee that no Brazilian products sold in the EU, nor the
financial markets underpinning them, are leading to increases in deforestation,
land grabbing of native lands or human rights violations."
The letter
also urged an end to trade talks until Brazil's far-right President Jair
Bolsonaro gives concrete commitments to implement the 2015 Paris climate deal.
European
trade commissioner Cecilia Malmstrom told journalists on Monday that EU
officials were in close contact with the growing number of NGOs expressing
concern.
EU
officials have "listened to them and tried to see what we can do,"
the Swedish commissioner said.
"There
are some measures taken in Brazil that we certainly do not agree with and a
trade agreement cannot solve all the miseries of the world," Malmstrom
said.
"But
we can get a context to discuss these issues. We are certainly trying to get a
chapter on trade and sustainable development that is as ambitious as possible
but it is not done yet."
Brazil's
Bolsonaro and Argentina's Mauricio Macri expressed confidence earlier this
month that the deal would soon be signed.
Malmstrom
said the two blocs were near an agreement, and expressed hope it could be
reached before the current European Commission stands down in November.
The main
obstacle has been European reluctance to open its market to agricultural
products from South America, and more recently differences have emerged with
Brazil over trading meat, sugar and automobiles.

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