The daylight has faded in the Caribbean port of Santa Marta, but high above the coast, the sun鈥檚 last rays sharpen the outlines of the white peaks of the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta. From my vantage point at the Hotel Don Pepe鈥檚 rooftop bar, the glowing mountaintops form a jagged, triangular halo behind Tito Rodr铆guez, who rolls an unsipped bottle of beer between his palms.
Rodr铆guez is the director of the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta National Park, a natural wonderland that rises from Colombia鈥檚 Caribbean shore to nearly 19,000 feet in just 26 miles. The park ascends from beaches and mangroves through dry forests, rainforests, cloud forests, glaciers, and the tropical tundra known as 辫谩谤补尘辞. Its steeply stacked microclimates support an exuberantly complex range of ecosystems and endemic wildlife, including 23 birds found nowhere else. The reserve is, according to a 2013 study published in the journal Science, the in the world for threatened species.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think the authors intended the word 鈥榩rotected鈥 to be ironic,鈥 Rodr铆guez says, managing a grim smile. 鈥淏ut in truth, it has never been adequately protected. And considering that protecting it was my responsibility, what I feel at this moment is an overwhelming sense of defeat and grief.鈥
Rodr铆guez鈥檚 broad face is darkened by lack of sleep and a day鈥檚 growth of beard. He鈥檚 come tonight to share with his conservationist friends a decision that he and his wife have not dared to discuss with others, including their children. In three days they intend to flee Colombia and the escalating spiral of intimidation and violence that has left his park鈥檚 headquarters in embers and a friend and coworker dead鈥攆elled by bullets that, sources say, were intended for Rodr铆guez.
As the waitress comes around to light the table鈥檚 candles, Rodr铆guez glances toward the mountains and lowers his shoulders, as if the mass of granite and snow were bearing down on him. Even though Colombia鈥檚 National Protection Unit has deemed him to be at an 鈥渆xtraordinary risk鈥 for assassination, they鈥檝e informed him that they will no longer maintain his security detail鈥斺渁lthough they said I could keep the bulletproof vest and a cell phone with a panic button.鈥 And because he鈥檚 a public figure, there鈥檚 no place he can hide in Colombia, and little possibility that he鈥檒l ever be able to return.
鈥淎nd so,鈥 he tells his friends, 鈥渢onight is goodbye.鈥
C
olombia, Rodr铆guez鈥檚 homeland, is one of the most biodiverse nations on Earth, and by far the world鈥檚 richest country in terms of avian life. Its tapestry of ecosystems hosts nearly 2,000 bird species, many of them migrants that spend summers in North America. The nation also has the distinction of being the most dangerous place on Earth to defend the environment, with an average of more than two defenders killed each week in 2020.
A similar devastating pattern is playing out in countries around the world, where anti-environmentalist violence and intimidation are on the rise. Growing numbers of park managers, rangers, Indigenous forest guardians, and anti-mining activists are being threatened, run out of protected areas and ancestral lands, and, in many cases, murdered.
In the Philippines, Indigenous activists are regularly 颅assassinated鈥攕ometimes with the involvement of government security forces鈥攆or opposing agribusiness expansion into their forested homelands. In India, attacks on conservationists have spiked against a backdrop of heavy-handed policing and repression of peaceful protests. In Central Africa, game guards in several countries are as endangered as the elephants, gorillas, and rhinos they protect. In developed countries, such as the United States and the United Kingdom, violence is less common, but increasingly authorities are criminalizing environmental activism while companies use aggressive legal tactics to stifle opposition.
Last year at least 225 land and environmental defenders were killed and many more attacked and threatened, according to Front Line Defenders, an international organization that investigates and verifies attacks. More than two-thirds of the deaths occurred in Latin America, much of which is rapidly developing within a context of weak governance, extreme inequality, and political instability. Rising demand for minerals and agricultural products such as soy and beef has accelerated the push to transform biodiverse landscapes into mines and pastures. Meanwhile, the potential for high profits with little oversight is attracting organized crime to the region鈥檚 mining and ranching sectors.
Those with close connections to land鈥攕mall-scale farmers, tribal leaders, activists, and organizers鈥攁re often the most at risk. In Honduras, Lenca activist Berta C谩ceres was murdered in her home after waging a grassroots campaign that pressured the world鈥檚 largest dam builder to pull out of a project that would have cut off water and subsistence livelihoods for her people. In Mexico, Tarahumara farmer Isidro Baldenegro was jailed for 15 months for organizing protests against illegal logging, and later assassinated. In Peru, after M谩xima Acu帽a stood up to a multi颅national mining company trying to evict her family from their land, she and a daughter were beaten unconscious by the company鈥檚 militarized security contractors, who also destroyed their crops.
Many observers say that the rise of authoritarian leaders and populist politics has emboldened illegal miners, loggers, and land grabbers, and led governments to use national-security legislation to quash protest. In Brazil鈥檚 Amazon, for instance, land invasions and other attacks on Indigenous and Afro-Brazilian forest guardians have increased since President Jair Bolsonaro took office in January 2019. Bolsonaro has praised the genocide of Indigenous peoples and encouraged loggers and ranchers to cut and burn the forest to make way for cattle and infrastructure projects. Unsurprisingly, deforestation of the Brazilian Amazon rose 34.5 percent between August 2019 and July 2020.
From Brazil to the Philippines to the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the world continues to lose precious ecosystems and their most effective defenders. The COVID-19 pandemic has not eased the trend鈥攁nd may have exacerbated it as the health crisis diverted resources and attention from rural areas, and as authorities used the pandemic as an excuse to crack down.
I
n Colombia, barely a week into 2021, conservationist and community leader Gonzalo Cardona became the year鈥檚 first environmental leader to be assassinated. Gonza, as his friends called him, is credited with saving the endangered Yellow-eared Parrot, an effort he began in the late 1990s when there were only 81 known individuals. By creating reserves and halting illegal logging of the parrots鈥 habitat, Cardona and his collaborators grew the population to 2,895 birds, in dozens of flocks scattered in Colombia鈥檚 Central Andes. Cardona had just wrapped up his latest parrot census when he was gunned down on a mountain road on his way to his home in Roncesvalles.
The cloud forests of the Central Andes lie on a strategic route long used by combatants during Colombia鈥檚 52-year civil war. In the mid-1960s, liberal rebels formed the first of several Marxist-inspired guerrilla groups, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC). In the 1980s, landowners and others formed far-right paramilitary groups to counter left-wing insurgents and their perceived supporters, often with the help of the Colombian army and local politicians. The fighting killed more than 220,000 people and forced more than 5 million from their homes. After the government struck a 2016 peace deal with the FARC (the paramilitaries had demobilized in 2006), calm began returning to much of the countryside. Field research picked up and, until the COVID-19 pandemic, ecotourism was booming.
For the past six years, 爆料公社 has been working to protect Colombia鈥檚 most important bird habitats by incentivizing conservation in rural communities. Guide-training and other efforts to cultivate bird-based tourism have transformed local economies and attracted many thousands of international birders who have safely visited the nation鈥檚 prime birding and ecotourism areas.
But in other areas, the end of fighting has opened essential habitats for vulnerable species like the Blue-billed Curassow and the Plate-billed Mountain-Toucan to exploitation. In some pockets of rural Colombia, the FARC鈥檚 departure left a power vacuum that has emboldened drug traffickers, illegal loggers, and miners whose economic interests are threatened by those who defend fragile ecosystems and the species living within them. 鈥淚n places where the FARC had control, the state has failed to provide security or economic and social alternatives,鈥 says Felipe Clavijo-Ospina, a senior constitutional adviser at the Office of the Inspector-Attorney General of Colombia. 鈥淎s a result, these places are now getting colonized by criminal organizations that are pushing to exploit local resources.鈥
Added to the pressure from organized criminals, settlers, and small-scale loggers or miners are large international businesses that are rushing to exploit high-profit minerals, agricultural lands, and hydroelectric potential鈥攊n many cases without consulting or securing the consent of affected communities.
Over the past five years, Colombian activists who raised concerns about environmental abuse by international corporations were attacked hundreds of times, according to researchers with the Business and Human Rights Resource Centre. Forty-four percent of the attacks targeted activists who spoke out about just four large mining and fossil fuel companies; others targeted those raising concerns about dams and palm oil plantations.
Often, company agents use the threat of murder to push subsistence farmers off their lands. In many cases, the victims belong to Indigenous and Afro-Colombian communities that have long lived in remote regions, where they use resources sustainably and the state is virtually nonexistent.
A
reas vulnerable to conflict often host some of Colombia鈥檚 most important national parks. Consistent with Colombians鈥 growing concern for the environment, former president Juan Manuel Santos set an ambitious goal in 2010 to more than double the country鈥檚 parks and other conserved areas. By 2018 Colombia had expanded its reserves from 32 million acres to 76 million acres鈥攁dding an area larger than New York State.
But even with the support of international conservation organizations, resources to protect those areas have been scarce. Several reserves in the Amazon region have been left with no protection at all, after FARC dissidents threatened to attack. Elsewhere, rangers, with little more protection than the park service鈥檚 Andean bear logo embroidered on their shirtsleeves, often represent the state鈥檚 only presence in remote and violent regions.
In 2001, shortly after Rodr铆guez began working for the park service, he met Marta Hern谩ndez, the director of Tayrona National Park, which borders the Santa Marta park. In 2004, after Hern谩ndez reportedly defied a paramilitary group鈥檚 demands to use Tayrona鈥檚 beaches to load cocaine onto boats, gunmen burst into her home and opened fire. Hern谩ndez was the second director of Tayrona killed that decade; a third fled her post after receiving death threats.
When Rodr铆guez took over the much larger Santa Marta park in 2013, the government was beginning to take action to regain control of a strip of park land known as La Leng眉eta (the tongue), which connects the high sierra to the ocean. Incorporated into the reserve as part of the Kogui-Malay-Arhuaco Indigenous reservation, La Leng眉eta had long served as a strategic corridor for narcotics and weapons, and hundreds of non-Indigenous families had illegally moved onto the reserve. Though Rodr铆guez鈥檚 predecessors had informed the settlers that building and cultivating were prohibited, the population continued to grow. Paramilitary leaders with reported links to powerful ranchers and political families even took on the role of property developers and real estate agents, selling reserve land that they did not own. Over the past 15 years, hotels, banana plantations, and two entire towns were built illegally in La Leng眉eta.
鈥淏asically,鈥 Rodr铆guez says, 鈥淚 inherited a time bomb.鈥
Rodr铆guez figured that he had three choices: to do nothing, to crack down on the lawbreakers, or to begin what he calls 鈥渁n exercise of dialogue and consensus building among all the actors鈥hile still exercising authority.鈥
At first, his measured attempts to find balance 鈥渂etween the club and the carrot鈥 yielded positive results. After a year of dialogue, Rodr铆guez convinced ranchers to remove 250 head of cattle they were grazing illegally near park headquarters (a compound that the government had confiscated from a drug trafficker imprisoned in the United States). He set illegal loggers up with gigs monitoring sea turtle eggs instead. And when funds became available, he offered a contract ranger position to a former logger named Wilton Orrego, who lived in the illegal settlement of Perico Aguao. Rodr铆guez quickly became friends with Orrego and his wife.
At the same time, Rodr铆guez promoted conversations between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples living in La Leng眉eta, culminating in a 2015 agreement that the latter would relocate, but be allowed to engage in regulated subsistence activities within the park until they left. But the deal, signed by the park service鈥檚 general director and endorsed by the Ministry of Environment and Sustainable Development, was strongly opposed by some non-Indigenous people in the area, including powerful families with links to former Colombian president 脕lvaro Uribe. While applying pressure on lawmakers in Bogot谩 to scrap the 鈥渁nti-development鈥 plan, the landowners encouraged workers and squatters in La Leng眉eta to agitate against the parks. Over the next four years, the animosity escalated.
In 2017 the prosecutor鈥檚 office, protected by the military, razed 13 illegally constructed buildings, then presented the builders with an invoice for the demolition. Farm workers, riled by their bosses, threatened park staff, burned forests, and built more houses near the Santa Marta park headquarters. In late 2018 an environmental court ordered the owners of two illegal banana plantations to knock down their trees and infrastructure. The park service also authorized the bulldozing of the newly built houses, in an operation that was recorded by enraged residents who posted the videos on social media. The next day the park headquarters was burned to the ground.
Throughout this period, Rodr铆guez had been building trust with the four Indigenous groups living within the Tayrona and Santa Marta parks and led negotiations for joint conservation and management of the shared territory. An agreement was nearing completion when, on January 11, 2019, Rodr铆guez received his first death threat. Three days later assassins surprised ranger Wilton Orrego in Perico Aguao and shot him five times. With no ambulance available, his father borrowed a neighbor鈥檚 car and raced his bleeding son toward Santa Marta, an hour away. By the time they reached the hospital, the 38-year-old ranger and dad to a teenage daughter was dead.
That afternoon Rodr铆guez received a panicked voicemail from his boss, telling him that he鈥檇 learned that the attack had been aimed at Rodr铆guez. The police strongly advised that he leave the area immediately. Rodr铆guez and his family fled to Bogot谩 for several months and missed the signing of the agreement he had so painstakingly brokered. (鈥淭hat was one of the few achievements that gives me some joy, the feeling of having left a seed well planted,鈥 Rodr铆guez said later.) When he returned to Santa Marta, the National Protection Unit stationed round-the-clock officers at his house and assigned him two armed bodyguards, an armored van, and a bulletproof vest.
By this time, Colombia鈥檚 newly elected government had effectively scuttled the 2015 agreement by refusing to support the relocations. And in May 2019 Uribe and political allies, who wanted to construct hotels in the parks, began publicly airing their discontent with the management of Tayrona and Santa Marta. Uribe convened a meeting in Santa Marta with prominent landowners and politicians to discuss 鈥渢he future of ecotourism鈥 in the parks. When a journalist asked the director of the Colombian national park system, Julia Miranda, why no parks representative had attended the meeting, she replied, 鈥淲e were not invited.鈥 (Within a year Miranda, an environmental lawyer who had led the service for 17 years, would be replaced by a new director with a postgraduate specialization in construction.)
A month later Rodr铆guez got word that his security detail was to be discontinued. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 when we realized that we needed to find a way to get out of the country,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e would need to leave our jobs, our friends, our families, the kids鈥 schools, everything. And we would need to do it very quickly.鈥
F
or Colombia, each loss of a park ranger or other environmental defender represents a compounding loss to the nation. 鈥淩angers are defending the most important asset that Colombia has,鈥 says Carolina Gil of the Amazon Conservation Team, an organization that partners with communities to protect tropical forests. 鈥淭he ecosystems they鈥檙e protecting are essential for the survival of not only the populations that live around the protected areas but also the citizenship as a whole. In some way, all of us are affected.鈥
As are all of us. Environmental and land defenders are the first line of defense against biodiversity loss and climate breakdown. When an important habitat loses its protectors, exploitation follows. As forests tumble and tropical ecosystems collapse, we fall further behind in efforts to stabilize atmospheric carbon鈥攁nd the outlook for the planet looks a little bleaker.
With so much at stake, some groups offer defenders direct support. Front Line Defenders and Somos Defensores, for instance, have been able to help a small fraction with advocacy and protective measures such as bulletproofing, bodyguards, and temporary relocation. These efforts have saved lives, but they don鈥檛 stem the broader tide of losses or get to the root of the problem: the widespread impunity that enables, and even incentivizes, violence against people whose work is essential to the future of the Earth and the humans who live on it.
鈥淲hen nobody is being held accountable, there鈥檚 little risk or political cost when these killings take place,鈥 says Ed O鈥橠onovan of Front Line Defenders, which estimates that 85 percent of killings of Latin American environmental and human rights activists go unpunished. In Colombia, the rate of impunity is 92 percent, according to Global Witness, another group that tracks killings. To end the cycle, governments need to address land-rights issues, protect defenders鈥 safety, and bring to justice those responsible for attacks against them.
One ray of hope is the Escaz煤 Agreement, the first international treaty to include specific protection measures for defenders of the environment.颅 It requires Latin American and Caribbean countries to prevent, investigate, and reprimand attacks against them. To date 24 countries have signed and 12 have ratified the agreement, which entered into force in April. Unfortunately, many of the countries that are not yet fully on board with Escaz煤鈥攊ncluding Brazil, Colombia, Guatemala, and Honduras鈥攁re among the most dangerous for defenders. In some cases, ratification proponents have been overwhelmed by arguments from politicians and industry representatives that the agreement could limit investments and undermine national sovereignty.
Multinational companies that operate across national borders can use their power and influence to prevent violence and intimidation by pressuring governments to enforce laws and fully investigate attacks. Some corporations have developed zero-tolerance policies regarding threats against environmental and human rights defenders throughout their supply chains. But when companies choose to exploit an indifferent government鈥檚 weak or poorly enforced domestic regulation, there are few effective mechanisms to prevent corporate human rights abuses.
Encouragingly, lawmakers in the developed world have begun to take a proactive stance. The European Union is moving forward with strong laws that will hold companies accountable for the adverse impacts of their activities throughout their value chains. And in the United States, Sen. Brian Schatz (D-HI) has announced that he will introduce a bill to require businesses to verify that the commodities they import do not originate from illegally deforested land, including land cleared in violation of the rights of Indigenous and local communities.
Because slayings of Latin American environmental defenders are most often linked to opposition to projects backed by investment banks, financial institutions also play a role in perpetuating violence and environmental degradation. A small but growing number of investors and customers are making clear that banks should not support projects that adversely affect the environment, climate, or people living near resource-extraction sites.
Sometimes that pressure comes too late. International investors in the Agua Zarca dam in Honduras were informed of threats to Berta C谩ceres, but did nothing. Only after C谩ceres鈥檚 did financiers stop funding the project.
But some recent wins are demonstrating that pressure on investors can pay off. Earlier this year, three major European banks鈥擟redit Suisse, ING, and BNP Paribas鈥攁nnounced they will no longer finance the trade of oil extracted from the Sacred Headwaters region of the Ecuadorian Amazon. Oil projects threaten the region鈥檚 intact forests as well as the livelihood and cultures of more than 500,000 Indigenous people. And in 2020, after a campaign by environmentalists鈥攊ncluding many 爆料公社 members鈥攁ll six major American investment banks pledged not to finance drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, which would cause irreparable harm to wildlife, exacerbate the climate crisis, and violate the human rights of Alaska Natives.
For companies and investors, meaningfully involving local communities before development starts isn鈥檛 just the right thing to do; it鈥檚 also good for the bottom line. According to an International Development Bank analysis of 200 infrastructure projects in Latin America that led to conflict over the past four decades, a lack of consultation with local stakeholders increased costs by an average of 69 percent and delayed projects by an average of five years. Local stakeholders鈥 concerns about ecosystem degradation and pollution were cited as the main causes of conflict.
Intergovernmental financial institutions, such as the International Monetary Fund, also have a responsibility to act, given their mandates to support investments that promote sustainability and improve the living standards of people in developing countries. In response to harsh criticism over human rights abuses surrounding funded projects, the World Bank and the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) recently updated their policies to boost stakeholder engagement and human rights standards for borrowers and provide grievance mechanisms for complaints.
鈥淚n many cases [these standards] are better than local legislation. But not all projects are covered, and in the case of the IDB we鈥檝e found that people in affected communities often weren鈥檛 aware that there was a mechanism they could have used,鈥 says Carolina Juaneda, Latin America coordinator at the Bank Information Center. Juaneda and other observers say that large-scale investors need to go further and draw a line at supporting potentially harmful projects in the first place.
T
he next time I saw Tito Rodr铆guez, in January of last year, he again had a backdrop of snowy peaks behind him, this time in the form of snowbanks piled high along the sidewalks of a Canadian city. It had been two months since he and his family left Colombia. 鈥淭he cold and the snow,鈥 he said, zipping his jacket a little higher, 鈥渉ave been the easiest part.鈥
When the family departed Santa Marta, Rodr铆guez and his wife still hadn鈥檛 shared the true purpose of their trip with their two young children. They鈥檇 told them they would visit Disney World, tour Washington鈥檚 museums, walk through Times Square鈥攁ll of which they did. Then, they drove north toward Canada, telling the children that they would try to visit an aunt. 鈥淲e鈥檒l just have to check at the border,鈥 his wife said, 鈥渢o see if they鈥檒l let us in.鈥
鈥淯ntil then we鈥檇 been fine,鈥 Rodr铆guez told me, when we went inside for a coffee. 鈥淏ut on that day we were both terrified. There was snow, and confusion about where we should try to cross. We didn鈥檛 speak English, much less French, and here we were going to knock on the doors of Canada and ask for asylum.鈥
At 10 o鈥檆lock in the morning their taxi stopped, still a half-mile from the snow-swept border post. The driver refused to go farther, lest he be accused of human trafficking. And so the family got out and walked, dragging and carrying their bags and the family dog along the roadside.
Rodr铆guez remembers it as the most humiliating moment of his life. 鈥淚n Colombia, I had driven past Venezuelan refugees struggling with their luggage on the roads. And now that was us, walking, the faces in passing cars looking at us. Two weeks earlier I鈥檇 been the director of one of the world鈥檚 most important parks. And now, I was a refugee.鈥
In his pocket, Rodr铆guez had a letter in English explaining that his life was in danger and petitioning the Canadian government to take the family into custody so they could apply for asylum.
鈥淎pproaching the border, I got confused; I was in the wrong place. People were yelling at me. A border patrol lady was shouting, the children and my wife were screaming at me. I didn鈥檛 understand anything. A year of living in internal terror, and I鈥檇 kept my cool. But now I was losing it.鈥
Rodr铆guez had rehearsed a few English words to say when he handed the letter over. But when he finally reached the correct window, his mind went blank.
鈥淎ll I could say was 鈥楬elp, help.鈥欌夆
Rodr铆guez was led, sobbing, to an interview room. When the rest of the family rejoined him, the kids were freaking out.
鈥淏ut the officials treated us impressively,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hey calmed us; they made it clear that they were concerned about our well-being.鈥 Agents offered hot drinks and food, even for the dog. 鈥淚t was at this moment that I began to feel the tremendous decency and humanity of this country.鈥
Canada took them in. The children struggled after their parents broke the news that they wouldn鈥檛 be returning to their friends and extended family or to their tropical home. A year later they鈥檝e formed new friendships and are learning French. Rodr铆guez and his wife, a veterinarian, are considering how to rebuild their careers. For now, the former director of the most irreplaceable protected area in the world is picking up odd jobs鈥攎anual labor, maintenance, truck driving鈥攁nd hoping that he鈥檒l eventually be able to find a job in conservation.
He鈥檚 heard bits and pieces about the continuing chaos in La Leng眉eta. The news is always painful. For his sanity, he tries to stay 鈥渋n the margins,鈥 he says. 鈥淥ur lives were turned upside down. But I have no choice but to consider myself lucky.鈥 He鈥檚 well aware that most of his former colleagues don鈥檛 have the option to get out鈥攁 truth reinforced a few days after we met again, when ranger Yamid Alonso was shot to death at El Cocuy National Park. Alonso had been left, unsupported and unarmed, to guard an isolated checkpoint at 11,500 feet.
鈥淚 believe that the majority of parks officials [in Colombia] feel completely alone,鈥 Rodr铆guez told me.
And that may be one of the saddest aspects of this tragic phenomenon. Those who are courageous enough to stand up for these last bastions of nature often do so with little or no support. This reinforces assailants鈥 belief that, after an initial uproar, the people they鈥檝e eliminated will soon be forgotten.
That doesn鈥檛 have to be the case. When we tell these defenders鈥 stories, we keep their memories and their accomplishments alive. And when we advocate for justice and accountability, we support those who are still out there, risking their lives to protect our planet and our future.
Tom Clynes鈥檚 last feature for 爆料公社 was 鈥淔inding True North,鈥 about journeying through the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. He would like to acknowledge and thank John Edward Myers, who first and provided valuable assistance with this story.
This story originally ran in the Summer 2021 issue. To receive our print magazine, become a member by .
What Can You Do?
Those of us who aren't risking our lives for the environment can support those who are. Here鈥檚 how.
Support
Organizations such as , , , and work to protect, empower, and advocate for environmental, land, and human rights defenders. Ecotourism efforts that train and partner with local guides, such as 爆料公社鈥檚 Latin American Bird-Based Tourism program, empower local communities and leaders while improving their livelihoods.
Advocate
If you live in the United States, to express your support for legislation to ban U.S. imports of products linked to illegal deforestation and the violation of rights of indigenous and local communities. If you live in Canada, contact your Member of Parliament to advocate for strengthening the Canadian Ombudsperson for Responsible Enterprise , allowing it to pursue investigations and provide a meaningful mechanism for people affected by Canadian extractive corporations to seek justice.
Invest
Check your retirement portfolio to make sure that it doesn鈥檛 include companies and industries whose values are at odds with your own. The tool allows you to screen against your most important issues and choose funds that are deforestation-free and fossil-fuel-free. Consumers can also reward companies that consider the planet as well as profit and boycott firms and products linked with violence and environmental degradation. The lets you compare leading brands鈥 ethical ratings on a range of environmental and human rights issues.
Learn
is a multimedia effort by more than three dozen reporters from 10 countries to investigate episodes of violence and tell the in-depth stories of leaders and communities in Latin America who have devoted their lives to defending the environment. Thus far the team has documented nearly 2,400 attacks against environmental and Indigenous leaders.