Nature
The Amazon rainforest is not just an icon for the environmental
movement, it is the largest and most biodiverse forest left on
Earth. More, too, than a future world breadbasket, the Amazon is
home to almost a million indigenous Indians. The two issues that
predominate in the environmental debate, the destruction of the
rainforest and the plight of the indigenous Indian population, are
in many cases inextricably linked. Brazilians tend to react with
outrage at being lectured on the preservation of their environment
and the protection of native peoples by North Americans and
Europeans, who less than twenty years ago were still accusing
Brazil of failing to exploit the very resources they now seek to
save. Justifiable as Brazilian accusations of hypocrisy may be,
however, they cannot hide the fact that there is a real
environmental crisis in Brazil, a reality that is finally gaining
lip service at least among domestic politicians
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