#PrayForAmazonia Goes Viral as
Twitter Users Call Attention to 'International Emergency' of Fires Devastating
Brazil's Rainforest
"The Amazon rainforest
has been burning for three weeks! We are on the verge of losing it completely
if the fire isn't put out. The loss of trees, the loss of biodiversity is what
is accelerating climate change."
The hashtag #PrayForAmazonia went
viral on Tuesday as social media users attempted to draw the world's attention
to the Amazon rainforest, which has been devastated for weeks by fires so
intense they
can be seen from space.
According
to Euro News, it is unclear whether the fires were caused by
agricultural activity or deforestation. Both have accelerated
rapidly under Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, who made opening the
Amazon to corporate exploitation a key plank of his election campaign.
Twitter users on Tuesday
slammed the media for paying too little attention to the Amazon blazes,
particularly given the essential role the rainforest plays in absorbing
planet-warming carbon dioxide—a capacity that earned it the nickname
"lungs of the world."
"The Amazon has been
burning for three weeks, and I'm just now finding out because of the lack of
media coverage," wrote one
observer. "This is one of the most important ecosystems on Earth."
Satellite data collected by
the Brazilian government's National Space Research Institute (INPE) published
in June showed that deforestation has risen dramatically under Bolsonaro, who
dismissed the research as "a
lie" and fired INPE
director Ricardo Galvão for defending the data.
As The Guardian reported,
the INPE findings showed the Amazon "lost 739sq km during the 31 days [of
May], equivalent to two football pitches every minute."
As Newsweek reported Tuesday,
One large fire, which started
in late July, burnt around 1,000 hectares of an environmental reserve in the
Brazilian state of Rondônia—located on the border with Bolivia. This blaze,
along with others in the region, created dense plumes of smoke that spread far
across the state, endangering the health of people living in the area and the
lives of animals.
Two weeks ago, the state of
Amazonas in the northwest of the country declared a state of emergency in
response to an increase in the number of fires there... Various fires have also
been burning in the state of Mato Grosso, according to satellite imagery.
The fires have become so
intense that smoke from the blaze darkened the afternoon
sky on Monday in São Paulo, Brazil's most populous city.
"The Amazon rainforest
has been on fire for weeks, and it's so bad it's literally blotting out the sun
miles away," tweeted Robert Maguire, research director at U.S. government
watchdog group Citizens for Ethics and Responsibility in Washington.
The advocacy group Amazon
Watch on Tuesday called the
Bolsonaro regime's attacks on the world's largest rainforest "an
international tragedy."
"What can we do?"
the group tweeted. "1. Support the courageous resistance of the indigenous
peoples of the Amazon. 2. Make clear to the agribusiness and financiers
involved in the destruction that we won't buy their products."
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