Assassinations of environmental activists have doubled over last decade

Where is Som­bath Som­phone? With every day that pass­es, the fate of one of south-east Asia’s most high-pro­file envi­ron­men­tal activists, who was snatched from the streets of Laos in Decem­ber, becomes more wor­ri­some.

Where is Som­bath Som­phone? With every day that pass­es, the fate of one of south-east Asia’s most high-pro­file envi­ron­men­tal activists, who was snatched from the streets of Laos in Decem­ber, becomes more wor­ri­some.

His case has been raised by the State Depart­ment and count­less NGOs around the world. But the author­i­ties in Laos have offered no clue as to what hap­pened after Som­bath was stopped at a police check­point on a Sat­ur­day after­noon in the Lao cap­i­tal of Vien­tiane as he returned home from his office. It looks increas­ing­ly like state kid­nap — or worse, if recent evi­dence of the state-spon­sored killings of envi­ron­men­tal cam­paign­ers in oth­er coun­tries is any­thing to go by.

Per­son­al dan­ger is not what most envi­ron­men­tal­ists have in mind when they take up the cause of pro­tect­ing nature and the peo­ple who rely on it in their dai­ly lives. But from Laos to the Philip­pines to Brazil, the list of envi­ron­men­tal­ists who have paid for their activism with their lives is grow­ing. It is a grim toll, espe­cial­ly in the last year.

One of the most gris­ly cas­es occurred last year in Rio de Janeiro on the final day of the Rio+20 Earth Sum­mit. On the after­noon of June 22, del­e­gates from through­out the world — me includ­ed — were prepar­ing to leave for the air­port as Almir Nogueira de Amor­im and his friend João Luiz Telles Pen­e­tra were set­ting sail for a fish­ing trip in the city’s Gua­n­abara Bay.

The two men, besides being fish­er­men, were lead­ers of AHOMAR, the local orga­ni­za­tion of sea­men, which they had helped set up three years ear­li­er to fight the con­struc­tion of gas pipelines across the bay to a new refin­ery run by the Brazil­ian nation­al oil com­pa­ny Petro­bras. The pipelines, they said, would cause pol­lu­tion, and the engi­neer­ing works would destroy fish­eries.

The issue they were rais­ing — pro­tect­ing the liveli­hoods of peo­ple who used nat­ur­al resources — was at the heart of the Rio conference’s agen­da for sus­tain­able devel­op­ment. But some­one in Rio saw it as a threat. Two days lat­er, the bod­ies of the two men had been found. One was washed up on the shore, hands and feet bound by ropes. The oth­er was found at sea, stran­gled and tied to the boat, which had sev­er­al holes in the hull.

This was no iso­lat­ed assas­si­na­tion. In the three years since AHOMAR was set up, two oth­er cam­paign­ers had been mur­dered. To date nobody has been con­vict­ed of any of the offens­es. The refin­ery is expect­ed to open ear­ly next year.

The month before the two Brazil­ian fish­er­men were mur­dered, a civ­il ser­vant on the oth­er side of the world who was cam­paign­ing against a planned hydro­elec­tric dam on the south­ern Fil­ipino island of Min­danao was shot death. Mar­gar­i­to Cabal was return­ing home from vis­it­ing Kibawe, one of 21 vil­lages sched­uled to be flood­ed by the 300-megawatt Pulan­gi V hydro­elec­tric project.

Cabal’s assailant escaped and remains unknown. No pros­e­cu­tion has fol­lowed, but atten­tion has focused on gov­ern­ment secu­ri­ty forces. Accord­ing to the World Orga­ni­za­tion Against Tor­ture, an inter­na­tion­al net­work based in Switzer­land that has tak­en up the case, Fil­ipino sol­diers had for sev­er­al weeks been con­duct­ing mil­i­tary oper­a­tions in and around Kibawe and had attacked peas­ant groups oppos­ing the dam. If the sol­diers did not do the deed, they cer­tain­ly helped cre­ate an atmos­phere in which envi­ron­men­tal­ists were seen as a tar­get for vio­lence.

Cabal is the thir­teenth envi­ron­men­tal­ist killed in the Philip­pines in the past two years. Sev­en months ear­li­er, a Catholic mis­sion­ary was mur­dered after oppos­ing local min­ing and hydro projects. “The sit­u­a­tion is get­ting worse,” says Edwin Gariguez, the local head of Car­i­tas, the Catholic aid char­i­ty.

And it’s get­ting worse in oth­er nations as well. NGOs such as Human Rights Watch agree that 2012 was also a new low for human rights in Cam­bo­dia, with cam­paign­ers against ille­gal log­ging and land grabs tar­get­ed by state secu­ri­ty per­son­nel and by gang­sters work­ing for com­pa­nies har­vest­ing the nation’s nat­ur­al resources.

One of those cam­paign­ers was Chut Wut­ty, a for­mer sol­dier and one-time Cam­bo­di­an activist with Glob­al Wit­ness, a UK-based NGO that high­lights links between envi­ron­men­tal exploita­tion and human rights abus­es. When Glob­al Wit­ness was expelled from the coun­try a few years ago, Wut­ty formed the Nat­ur­al Resource Pro­tec­tion Group to help Cam­bo­di­an vil­lagers con­front ille­gal log­gers.

But last April, Wut­ty was shot dead, appar­ent­ly by a group of mil­i­tary police that he encoun­tered while tak­ing local jour­nal­ists to see ille­gal log­gers in the west of the coun­try. Accord­ing to a gov­ern­ment report, Wutty’s assailant was killed at the scene, alleged­ly by a for­est ranger. A provin­cial court recent­ly aban­doned an inves­ti­ga­tion into Wutty’s mur­der and released the ranger. One of the jour­nal­ists, who fled into the for­est when the shoot­ing start­ed, says she does not believe the offi­cial ver­sion of what hap­pened, and human rights groups have also said they find it implau­si­ble.

Crim­i­nal­i­ty is at the heart of much of the destruc­tion of the world’s forests. A recent report from the UN Envi­ron­ment Pro­gramme con­clud­ed that up to 90 per­cent of the world’s log­ging indus­try was in one way or anoth­er out­side the law. In such cir­cum­stances, vio­lence against those who try to pro­tect the forests can become endem­ic.