Subject: BIOD AA: Nicaragua's rainforests in peril
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ACTION ALERT
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WORLDWIDE FOREST/BIODIVERSITY CAMPAIGN NEWS
Nicaragua's Tropical Rainforest in Peril
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Forest Networking a Project of Ecological Enterprises
     http://forests.org/

1/5/98
OVERVIEW, SOURCE & COMMENTARY by EE
Despite being ruled unconstitutional by the Nicaraguan Supreme Court, 
logging in the North Atlantic Autonomous Region by the Korean company 
Kumkyng continues.  This area is the largest intact rainforest 
ecosystem in the Western hemispere, outside of the Amazon.  An urgent 
appeal for letters is made in Rainforest Action Network's action alert 
regarding the matter.
g.b.

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RELAYED TEXT STARTS HERE:

Title:    LARGEST TROPICAL RAINFOREST OUTSIDE AMAZON IN PERIL
Source:   Rainforest Action Network, Action Alert #134, January, 1998
Status:   Distribute freely with proper credit given to source
Date:     January 5, 1998

OUTSIDE OF THE AMAZON, Nicaragua's East coast features the largest 
intact tropical rainforest in the Western Hemisphere. The lush 
territory has a dispassionate name, the North Atlantic Autonomous 
Region; but it is home to everything we are passionate about. The 
region is a vast, old growth rainforest ecosystem with mahogany trees, 
medicinal plants and countless species of animals and insects.  It is 
the traditional homeland of Miskito, Sumu, and Rama Indians. 

The Nicaraguan Constitution recognizes the Indian populations in the 
coastal rainforest as autonomous nations; however, despite their 
opposition, Nicaragua's Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources 
recently granted extensive logging concessions there to Solcarsa, a 
subsidiary of the Korean-based transnational company Kumkyng.   

This past February, however, Nicaragua's Supreme Court ruled the 
concession unconstitutional.  Nicaraguan law requires companies to 
consult regional advisory councils in assessing the environmental 
impact of logging operations. Solcarsa took a shortcut: the company 
obtained endorsements only from the regional governor and the council 
president. 

Despite these sanctions Solcarsa is still building roads, and is still 
cutting down old growth rainforest trees.  Nicaragua is one of the 
poorest countries in Central America, and the influx of foreign 
capital gives a temporary boost to the economy.  For now, neither the 
government of President Arnoldo Aleman nor the Ministry of Environment 
has made any efforts to enforce the Supreme Court's ruling against 
Solcarsa - but when the timber is gone the logging company will move 
on, leaving the economy in ruins, and the ecosystem too degraded to 
provide a livelihood for its inhabitants. 

According to sources in Nicaragua, the wood treatment plants Solcarsa 
operates in the coastal rainforest use toxic chemicals that have been 
banned in most countries.  These chemicals run directly into the 
rivers and streams that supply drinking water for local traditional 
communities.  Solcarsa has demonstrated no respect for community 
interests or needs, has built logging facilities without approval, and 
has relocated entire indigenous settlements that were in the path of 
the company's chainsaws. 

The international community is taking notice of Nicaragua's rainforest 
crisis.  In early October, The Human Rights Commission of the 
Organization of American States ruled that the Nicaraguan government 
violated international law by ignoring its own Supreme Court ruling. 
On November 10 this year, a worldwide day of solidarity, activists in 
communities across the U.S. and in Nicaragua called on Nicaruagua's 
President Aleman to uphold his Constitution, stand up for indigenous 
rights, and put an immediate end to logging concessions in the coastal 
old growth rainforest.   

Now is the time to let Nicaragua's government know that it must 
protect the integrity of its environment and indigenous cultures. 

WHAT YOU CAN DO

Let President Aleman know that you want Nicaragua to maintain 
indigenous rights, and save the largest old growth tropical rainforest 
north of the Amazon.  Postage is U.S. 60 cents.  Here is a sample 
letter: 

President Arnoldo Aleman  
Casa de Presidente  
Managua, Nicaragua 

Dear President Aleman,  Nicaragua recognizes the self-determination of 
its indigenous peoples, yet despite their opposition the logging 
company Solcarsa is cutting down old growth rainforests in the North 
Atlantic Autonomous Region.  Although ruled unconstitutional by the 
Nicaraguan Surpreme Court, Solcarsa's operations have continued to 
destroy ancient trees and poison local rivers. 

I am asking you to make protecting your old growth rainforests a 
priority, and to require that the company compensate the indigenous 
community for the damage it has done to their homeland.

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For more information:  Patricia Awerbuch, Rainforest Action Group of 
Delaware Valley, P.O. Box 134 Newtown Square, PA  19073; or: Orin 
Langelle, Native Forest Network, P.O. Box 57 Burlington, VT  05402, or 
E-mail: nfnena@sover.net.      Contributors include:  Patricia 
Awerbuch;  Mary Brook Finley, Environmental Task Force; and Marika 
Holmgren, RAN. 

###RELAYED TEXT ENDS###   
This document is for general distribution.  All efforts are made to 
provide accurate, timely pieces; though ultimate responsibility for 
verifying all information rests with the reader.  Check out our Gaia 
Forest Conservation Archives at URL= http://forests.org/   
Networked by Ecological Enterprises, grbarry@students.wisc.edu