Monday, December 15, 2025
Village Voice News
ADVERTISEMENT
  • Home
  • News
  • Sports
  • Editorial
  • Letters
  • Global
  • Columns
    • Eye On Guyana
    • Hindsight
    • Lincoln Lewis Speaks
    • Future Notes
    • Blackout
    • From The Desk of Roysdale Forde SC
    • Diplomatic Speak
    • Mark’s Take
    • In the village
    • Mind Your Business
    • Bad & Bold
    • The Voice of Labour
    • The Herbal Section
    • Politics 101 with Dr. David Hinds
    • Talking Dollars & Making Sense
    • Book Review 
  • Education & Technology
  • E-Paper
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Sports
  • Editorial
  • Letters
  • Global
  • Columns
    • Eye On Guyana
    • Hindsight
    • Lincoln Lewis Speaks
    • Future Notes
    • Blackout
    • From The Desk of Roysdale Forde SC
    • Diplomatic Speak
    • Mark’s Take
    • In the village
    • Mind Your Business
    • Bad & Bold
    • The Voice of Labour
    • The Herbal Section
    • Politics 101 with Dr. David Hinds
    • Talking Dollars & Making Sense
    • Book Review 
  • Education & Technology
  • E-Paper
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
Village Voice News
No Result
View All Result
Home Global

Colombia’s indigenous tribes share secrets to safeguard Amazon forest

Staff Reporter by Staff Reporter
June 24, 2020
in Global
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

By Anastasia Moloney

LETICIA, Colombia (Thomson Reuters Foundation) – Sitting in a circle in a wooden shack on the outskirts of Leticia, the capital of Colombia’s Amazonas province, indigenous leaders savoured powdered coca leaves and tobacco paste as part of an ancient ritual that connects them with their ancestors.

READ ALSO

Commander in charge of US military operations in the Caribbean retires after clashes with Hegseth over boat strikes

People Are Being Turned Away From Their Citizenship Ceremonies in Trump’s New Immigration Crackdown

The message passed down through their tribes has stayed the same for thousands of years: preserve life.

“We’ve been protecting the Amazon for millennia,” said Julio Bombaire, one of six indigenous leaders from different Colombian Amazon tribes taking part in the ceremony.

“Our creators taught us how to take care of our land and live in harmony. We were given a mandate and a responsibility by our creator to conserve life and nature,” he said.

It is an age-old custom which indigenous leaders urged the presidents of Colombia, Peru and Ecuador – scheduled to meet in the border town of Leticia on Friday to discuss forest fires raging in the Brazilian Amazon – to heed and respect.

The political leaders are expected to explore how best to join forces to preserve the Amazon. The world’s largest rainforest is under growing threat from deforestation and fires, which could hamper the global fight to curb climate change.

An aide for Brazil’s President Jair Bolsonaro said on Monday he would miss the summit to prepare for surgery, although he was expected to join by video link.

Colombia’s President Ivan Duque has said he wants the country to lead a “conservation pact” to protect forests in the Amazon basin, which is also shared by Venezuela, Peru, Ecuador, Guyana, Suriname and Bolivia, where fires are burning too.

Indigenous leaders in Colombia told the Thomson Reuters Foundation their voice and participation would be crucial for any regional pact to work.

“The forest is here not because presidents have protected it but because of our knowledge that has been transferred orally from generation to generation. This isn’t about a four-year term as president. This is forever,” said Bombaire from the Muri tribe.

“The danger comes from those governments who ignore or do not recognise this millennial knowledge,” he said, as others murmured in agreement, bowing their heads to the floor.

‘DEATH BY A MILLION CUTS’

Countries that are home to the Amazon have struggled to stem deforestation rates in recent years.

More trees are being cut down or burned to clear land for agriculture and cattle ranching, along with illegal mining and logging that is going unchecked, environmentalists say.

“How it happens in the Amazon is death by a million cuts,” said Laurel Sutherlin, a spokesman for the Rainforest Action Network (RAN), a U.S.-based campaign group.

“A road gets put in, then small-scale miners and people come in – they burn a little bit here, then it grows, and then the companies come in and it kind of metastasises,” he said.

Protection of the Amazon’s forests is seen as a vital pillar of efforts to slow global warming because trees absorb carbon dioxide, the main heat-trapping gas, from the air.

After trees are cut down, the carbon they store is released back into the atmosphere when they are burned or rot.

In Colombia’s southern Amazon region, where dozens of indigenous tribes live in self-governing and autonomous reserves that overlap with national parks, the threat to the rainforest has grown since a 2016 peace deal between the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) and the government.

Former guerrilla jungle strongholds and no-go areas are opening up for business and exploitation, along with more forest being cleared to plant coca, the raw ingredient for cocaine.

Colombia is losing about 200,000 hectares (494,000 acres) of forest each year, much of that in its Amazon region.

“The peace process in Colombia vastly opened up the Amazon to multinational interests, including oil and mining and mega-dam constructions,” said Leila Salazar-Lopez, executive director of Amazon Watch, a U.S.-based campaign group.

Amazon indigenous tribes, who depend on the rainforest for their culture and survival, say forests have a spiritual rather than an economic value.

“There’s a direct relationship between humanity, spirits and nature. Any action, any intervention has a consequence. We all breathe the same air,” said Gil Farekatde, an indigenous elder from the Muri tribe among the circle.

PROTECTED AREAS

A key way to safeguard the Amazon is by placing more land under protection, including indigenous reserves, backed up by government policy that monitors illegal logging, enforces laws and respects land rights in those areas, green groups say.

“The very best that we have to protect these forests is to protect the rights of the people who have been protecting them for centuries,” said RAN’s Sutherlin.

Campaigners are working with indigenous peoples in Ecuador, Peru and Colombia, to help tribes map their territories more accurately using drones and mobile phones.

“We’ve seen that deforestation rates in indigenous lands are multiple times lower than they are outside,” said Mikaela Weisse, manager at Global Forest Watch, a project at the World Resources Institute that does satellite-based forest monitoring.

For indigenous lawyer Barnabi Palma, back in the circle, tribes need to show people around the world that they know how to protect the Amazon, something that is rarely recognised.

“Indigenous people are a portal of knowledge, which has sustained us for millennia and allowed the Amazon to survive. As indigenous groups, we have a responsibility to show that our knowledge can contribute to humanity,” said Palma.

“It’s not the forest that is in danger, it is life itself.”

Credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women’s and LGBT+ rights, human trafficking, property rights, and climate change.

ShareTweetSendShareSend

Related Posts

Navy Adm. Alvin Holsey salutes during a relinquishment of command and retirement ceremony at US Southern Command in Doral, Florida, on Friday, December 12, 2025. Rebecca Blackwell/AP
Global

Commander in charge of US military operations in the Caribbean retires after clashes with Hegseth over boat strikes

by Admin
December 13, 2025

(CNN) Adm. Alvin Holsey, the commander of US Southern Command who reportedly clashed with Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth over the...

Read moreDetails
New US citizens use handheld fans to take shade from the sun during a naturalization ceremony at George Washington's Mount Vernon in Mount Vernon, Virginia, US, on Friday, July 4, 2025. Kent Nishimura/Bloomberg via Getty ImagesKent Nishimura—Bloomberg via Getty Images
Global

People Are Being Turned Away From Their Citizenship Ceremonies in Trump’s New Immigration Crackdown

by Admin
December 12, 2025

Time - Jane was one month away from her naturalization ceremony, the day she would swear the Oath of Allegiance...

Read moreDetails
President Donald Trump Andrew Harnik/Getty Images
Global

Donald Trump Issues World War III Warning

by Admin
December 12, 2025

Newsweek - U.S. President Donald Trump has issued a warning about the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war, cautioning that these kinds of...

Read moreDetails
Next Post
Tourists dress in ethnic clothing before they start the tour of a village in Chiang Mai, Thailand, on February 28, 2020. Photo courtesy of Wocation.

Thailand's tourism social enterprises help locals hit by coronavirus


EDITOR'S PICK

West Indies Women to host Bangladesh Women for three ODIs and three T20Is from January 14 to February 1 in St. Kitts

January 3, 2025

Government hosting Diaspora outreach in U.K

April 12, 2023
Close-up of healthy artery within muscle showing muscle damage from rhabdomyolysis and arrow to show particles entering bloodstream   SOURCE: 4A11476  MOD: added muscle damage and particles entering bloodstream (base art also in 11425 MOD:added muscle texture in background)

Guyanese at increased risk of rhabdomyolysis due to heat and several factors

November 24, 2023

Region 2 officials who signed verifying completion of project lied to PAC

June 12, 2022

© 2024 Village Voice

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Sports
  • Editorial
  • Letters
  • Global
  • Columns
    • Eye On Guyana
    • Hindsight
    • Lincoln Lewis Speaks
    • Future Notes
    • Blackout
    • From The Desk of Roysdale Forde SC
    • Diplomatic Speak
    • Mark’s Take
    • In the village
    • Mind Your Business
    • Bad & Bold
    • The Voice of Labour
    • The Herbal Section
    • Politics 101 with Dr. David Hinds
    • Talking Dollars & Making Sense
    • Book Review 
  • Education & Technology
  • E-Paper
  • Contact Us

© 2024 Village Voice