منبر معارف الزراعة الأُسرية

Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities Are Using Satellite Data to Fight Deforestation

The Saamaka, an Afro-descendent tribal community, reside deep in the heart of Suriname’s Amazonian rainforest. They’ve maintained their plots of land and small farms for generations, relying on the bounty of fruits, nuts and medicines the surrounding tropical forest provides.  

But lately, their forested territory has seen unwelcome visitors. 

A logging company began bulldozing a road right through the Saamaka’s forest in early 2023. While the Suriname government sanctioned the logging concession, it came without the Saamaka’s consent, despite a 2007 ruling from the Inter-American Court of Human Rights requiring their approval for such projects. The road is just the latest threat facing the Saamaka’s land, on top of flooding from hydropower dams and water pollution from nearby mining operations.  

 “We are losing our very way of life — our food, our water, our land,” said Hugo Jabini, a community leader and spokesperson for the Saamaka. “We can no longer afford to be invisible.”

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المؤلف: KATIE Reytar
مؤلفين آخرين: Jessica Webb, Peter Veit
المنظمة: World Resources Institute
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السنة: 2023
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البلد/البلدان: Indonesia, Peru, Suriname
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النوع: مقالة في مدونة إلكترونية
لغة المحتوى: English
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