Brazil's Indigenous people turn to EU to save their savanna
Aldo GAMBOA
Mon, 25 March 2024 at 11:03 am GMT-5·4-min read
An EU law banning deforestation-derived products comes into effect at the end of 2024, but for Brazilian Indigenous people it contains an unbearable loophole: the Cerrado, Brazil's vast wooded savanna, is excluded from its scope.
An Indigenous delegation taking up the issue during a visit to Brussels said that the oversight -- for a region that supplies Europe with soy -- is "a question of survival" for them.
"The Cerrado is my home," declared Eliane Xunakalo, her feathered headdress waving in Belgium's spring weather.
The president of the Federation of Indigenous Peoples of Mato Grosso, one of the big Brazilian states across which the savanna extends, she visited Brussels last week with other activists to press the European Union to "improve" its anti-deforestation law.
More:
https://uk.news.yahoo.com/brazils-indigenous-people-turn-eu-160354642.html