Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro on Monday rejected a $22 million aid package offered by G7 countries to help battle fierce forest fires in the Amazon rainforest, which is often regarded as the planet’s “lungs”.
The G7 aid offer was announced by French President Emmanuel Macron.
Bolsonaro said that Brazil was not a “colonial territory” and that there was “a hidden agenda” behind Macron’s offer while rejecting the aid.
“Macron cannot even avoid a predictable fire in a church that is part of the world’s heritage, and he wants to give us lessons for our country?” Lorenzoni added, in a reference to the fire that hit Notre-Dame cathedral in Paris in April.
Brazil’s Foreign Minister Ernesto Araujo tweeted on Monday: “No one needs a ‘new initiative for the Amazon’ as Macron suggests when there are already several mechanisms under the UN Climate Convention to fund the fight against deforestation.”
During a joint news conference with Chilean President Sebastian Pinera, Macron announced that G7 countries would allocate $22 million in emergency funding to help with efforts to prevent fires in the Amazon rainforest.
He also said France would provide military support in the region to fight the fires.
Last week, tens of thousands of people gathered to the streets across Brazil where they started chanting “Burn Bolsonaro and not the Amazon”, in protest against President Jair Bolsonaro’s inaction in the face of massive wildfires that were devastating the world’s largest tropical rainforest.
In an interview with French public broadcaster France 2 at the conclusion of the G7 summit in Biarritz, Macron said Bolsonaro’s attitude towards deforestation could derail ratification of the free trade agreement between the EU and the Mercosur group.
“We respect your sovereignty. It’s your country,” said Macron, before insisting that the Amazon fires are a global issue.
“The Amazon forest is a subject for the whole planet… We cannot allow you to destroy everything,” he added.
In response to this, the Brazilian Foreign Minister said: “The efforts made by some political currents to extrapolate real environmental issues by transforming them into a fabricated ‘crisis’ as a pretext for introducing mechanisms for external control of the Amazon are very evident.
“Brazil will not accept any initiative that involves relativizing sovereignty over its territory, whatever the pretext and whatever the guise.”
The mobilization of the troops was announced on August 23 by Bolsonaro as the first measure to fight fires amid strong condemnation he has received for the government’s lack of action against illegal deforestation of the Amazon.