Brazilian environment minister quits amid illegal logging inquiry

Eldonita de Ed Newman
2021-06-24 18:19:55

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Salles acted as lead negotiator for Brazil in talks with the US over funding to preserve the Amazon rainforest[Sergio Lima/AFP]

Brasilia, June 24 (RHC)-- Brazil’s controversial Environment Minister Ricardo Salles, who quit on Wednesday, is facing a criminal investigation into whether or not he obstructed a police probe of illegal logging in the Amazon rainforest.

A Supreme Court justice authorised the investigation of Salles this month after federal police raids targeted the minister and other officials who are alleged to have allowed illegal wood exports.

“I understand that Brazil throughout this year and next on the international stage and also in the national agenda needs to have a strong union of interests,” Salles told reporters in Brasilia. “So that this can be done in the most serene manner possible, I submitted my resignation.”

The outgoing minister had acted as lead negotiator for Brazil in talks with the United States over funding to preserve the Amazon rainforest, where deforestation has surged since right-wing President Jair Bolsonaro took office in 2019.  Those negotiations had stalled, with the last meeting held more than a month ago, according to two sources familiar with the matter, who said it was unclear if the delay was related to Salles.

Salles had faced heavy criticism from global environmental advocates, after remarking in a recorded cabinet meeting that the Brazilian government should push through environmental deregulation while the public was distracted by the pandemic.   “Now that the media’s only talking about CCOVID, we need to use this moment of calm to ‘bring the whole herd of cattle through’ and change all the regulations,” he said.

He later denied he wanted to gut environmental protections, saying he meant only that the government should try to reduce red tape.  Bolsonaro has nominated Joaquim Alvaro Pereira Leite as Salles’ replacement, according to the official government gazette.

A former board member of the Brazilian Rural Society, a century-old lobby group for farming interests, Leite had been serving as the ministry’s secretary for the Amazon and environmental services.  “Whoever sits in the chair of minister will obey the orders of Bolsonaro and continue to implement the policy of environmental destruction, just as Salles did,” said Marcio Astrini, head of the Climate Observatory environmental group, in a statement.

Deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon surged by 85 percent in the first year of Bolsonaro’s administration, destroying an area bigger than Puerto Rico, according to government data.  It has continued at a high rate since, last month setting a new record for May at 1,180km square (456 square miles) – up 41 percent from the year before.



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