Social activist from Pará receives prize in the US for defending the Amazon
13:56
Agência Brasil
Brasília - Yesterday (24), in San Francisco, California (USA), Tarcísio
Feitosa, social activist in the Terra do Meio ("MIddle Ground") region of
the northern Brazilian state of Pará, was awarded the Goldman Environmental
Prize in the South and Central American category for his efforts to preserve
the Amazon. Feitosa is one of the people responsible for the creation of the
world's largest patchwork of protected tropical forest areas, a total of
around 225 thousand square kilometers including the Verde para Sempre ("Forever
Green") and Riozinho do Anfrísio extractive reserves (RESEX), the Serra
do Pardo National Park, and the Terra do Meio Ecological Station. Feitosa
was also involved in the creation of the Iriri RESEX, which should be concretized
in the coming months.
Feitosa is the third Brazilian recipient of the US$ 125 thousand prize. The
first, in 1992, was Carlos Alberto Ricardo, one of the founders of the Socioenvironmental
Institute. Ricardo was recognized for his defense of the rights of indigenous
peoples during the process of elaborating the 1988 Federal Constitution,
as well his accomplishments related to the demarcation of the Yanomami territory.
The other Brazilian winner is the current minister of the Environment, Marina
Silva, who was awarded the prize in 1996 for her efforts to establish extractive
reserves in her home state of Acre.
Translation: David Silberstein