Berliner Boersenzeitung - 'I'll kill you!': Mexico's nature defenders put lives on line

EUR -
AED 3.853483
AFN 73.422945
ALL 98.127206
AMD 413.370616
ANG 1.889997
AOA 957.220462
ARS 1068.021844
AUD 1.650496
AWG 1.888445
AZN 1.787697
BAM 1.955383
BBD 2.117308
BDT 125.323278
BGN 1.95486
BHD 0.39557
BIF 3099.609543
BMD 1.049136
BND 1.414471
BOB 7.246386
BRL 6.336263
BSD 1.048666
BTN 88.886353
BWP 14.276684
BYN 3.431803
BYR 20563.071451
BZD 2.113709
CAD 1.492758
CDF 3011.021556
CHF 0.936673
CLF 0.037324
CLP 1029.874571
CNY 7.63394
CNH 7.639297
COP 4552.202399
CRC 528.582255
CUC 1.049136
CUP 27.802112
CVE 110.241494
CZK 25.010574
DJF 186.452916
DKK 7.45716
DOP 63.73641
DZD 140.395638
EGP 53.320363
ERN 15.737044
ETB 133.226453
FJD 2.433734
FKP 0.830897
GBP 0.831655
GEL 2.948483
GGP 0.830897
GHS 15.415566
GIP 0.830897
GMD 75.538186
GNF 9053.069665
GTQ 8.078278
GYD 219.389039
HKD 8.158451
HNL 26.594329
HRK 7.525356
HTG 137.138144
HUF 408.817348
IDR 16818.494175
ILS 3.781235
IMP 0.830897
INR 88.984017
IQD 1373.707092
IRR 44155.527968
ISK 145.693963
JEP 0.830897
JMD 164.33496
JOD 0.744157
JPY 161.284814
KES 135.60127
KGS 91.230484
KHR 4222.019277
KMF 489.028699
KPW 944.222082
KRW 1506.039132
KWD 0.323082
KYD 0.873897
KZT 549.852276
LAK 22971.663965
LBP 93906.086771
LKR 304.32511
LRD 188.757953
LSL 18.814388
LTL 3.097827
LVL 0.634612
LYD 5.120908
MAD 10.469068
MDL 19.169547
MGA 4960.847656
MKD 61.509573
MMK 3407.553773
MNT 3564.965006
MOP 8.398249
MRU 41.658117
MUR 49.36226
MVR 16.160621
MWK 1818.377613
MXN 21.123839
MYR 4.669053
MZN 67.043722
NAD 18.814388
NGN 1624.17879
NIO 38.59122
NOK 11.710244
NPR 142.217965
NZD 1.822638
OMR 0.403931
PAB 1.048656
PEN 3.919789
PGK 4.244095
PHP 61.537618
PKR 291.581028
PLN 4.261804
PYG 8209.249588
QAR 3.822885
RON 4.974274
RSD 116.942018
RUB 109.638438
RWF 1439.46563
SAR 3.941929
SBD 8.795492
SCR 15.818239
SDG 631.05934
SEK 11.529079
SGD 1.416023
SHP 0.830897
SLE 23.924154
SLL 21999.86679
SOS 599.260799
SRD 36.934883
STD 21715.003182
SVC 9.176043
SYP 2635.986679
SZL 18.806811
THB 35.803914
TJS 11.456439
TMT 3.682468
TND 3.316793
TOP 2.457186
TRY 36.662387
TTD 7.118414
TWD 34.12005
TZS 2500.870298
UAH 43.693683
UGX 3824.148148
USD 1.049136
UYU 46.610062
UZS 13486.124429
VES 52.294934
VND 26653.307664
VUV 124.555563
WST 2.898541
XAF 655.804665
XAG 0.034383
XAU 0.000395
XCD 2.835344
XDR 0.795815
XOF 655.817164
XPF 119.331742
YER 262.67754
ZAR 18.76538
ZMK 9443.489413
ZMW 28.995265
ZWL 337.82146
  • RBGPF

    0.5000

    61

    +0.82%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1500

    7.2

    -2.08%

  • CMSC

    -0.1600

    24.39

    -0.66%

  • RELX

    -0.2800

    47.04

    -0.6%

  • VOD

    0.0160

    8.696

    +0.18%

  • GSK

    -0.2480

    33.922

    -0.73%

  • AZN

    -0.4200

    66.52

    -0.63%

  • RIO

    -1.2850

    62.165

    -2.07%

  • BTI

    0.0310

    37.591

    +0.08%

  • SCS

    0.1050

    13.045

    +0.8%

  • JRI

    0.0094

    13.1359

    +0.07%

  • BCC

    -3.2800

    136.56

    -2.4%

  • BP

    -0.1470

    30.003

    -0.49%

  • NGG

    0.1420

    59.612

    +0.24%

  • BCE

    -0.3200

    25.49

    -1.26%

  • CMSD

    -0.1330

    24.087

    -0.55%

'I'll kill you!': Mexico's nature defenders put lives on line
'I'll kill you!': Mexico's nature defenders put lives on line

'I'll kill you!': Mexico's nature defenders put lives on line

In the fir forests of Mexico, one of the world's most dangerous countries for environmentalists, the legacy of butterfly defender Homero Gomez lives on two years after his suspected murder.

Text size:

Despite the dangers of standing up to illegal loggers, fellow conservationists continue Gomez's work guarding the El Rosario monarch butterfly sanctuary in Mexico's central highlands.

The agricultural engineer dedicated much of his life to protecting the habitat of the iconic orange and black insects, which migrate several thousand kilometers (miles) each year to Mexico, fleeing the Canadian winter.

His legacy "is in all of us," Olegario Sanchez told AFP during a patrol through the mountains of the El Rosario sanctuary, where swarms of butterflies delight visitors with majestic aerial dances.

The body of Gomez, who had gained international recognition for his activism and management of the sanctuary, was found at the bottom of a well in January 2020 in the state of Michoacan, where monarch butterflies spend the winter.

Days later, the dead body of another butterfly conservationist, Raul Hernandez, was found bearing signs of violence in Michoacan, which is home to several criminal gangs.

The prosecution's ongoing investigation suggests that Gomez, 50, was murdered.

He was one of 30 environmentalists killed in Mexico in 2020, according to rights group Global Witness.

The death toll soared 67 percent from 2019, making Mexico the second-deadliest country for environmentalists behind Colombia.

Almost a third of the attacks in Mexico were linked to logging, and half targeted Indigenous communities, Global Witness said.

Impunity was "shockingly high," with up to 95 percent of murders going unprosecuted, it added.

- 'It was murder' -

The Michoacan prosecutor's office, which did not respond to AFP's request for an interview, said that Gomez died due to "mechanical suffocation due to submersion... with traumatic brain injury."

His family have no doubt that he was killed by criminals pillaging the forest that he loved.

"It wasn't an accident. It was murder," Gomez's widow Rebeca Valencia told AFP, voicing fears of a cover-up given the lack of progress in the investigation.

In the El Rosario sanctuary, near one of the many clusters of resting butterflies that hang from oyamel fir trees, Gomez's companions smiled wistfully at his memory.

"He was a person with a lot of spirit," said Sanchez, adding that the activist's strength would live on through his fellow conservationists.

"There are 260 of us (community guards) and we keep going along the same path" of surveillance and reforestation, Sanchez said.

The wildlife defenders, some armed with machetes, walk up to 20 kilometers each shift, day and night, in groups of 10 to protect fir and pine trees from loggers as well as hungry livestock and fires.

When they detect suspicious activity, they report it to the authorities.

Police also stand guard on tourist trails in the sanctuary, which covers around 2,500 hectares (6,000 acres).

Together with other overwintering sites, it forms Mexico's Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Reserve -- a UNESCO World Heritage site visited by millions of the insects each year.

- 'Immensely sad' -

In Mexico's central state of Hidalgo, Filiberta Nevado also refuses to abandon her work protecting the Zacacuautla forest despite the risks of confronting criminals lured in particular by its pine trees to use for carpentry.

In October 2020, a logger approached her to say: "If anything happens to me, I'll kill you!"

Nevado, 66, showed apparent evidence of illegal activities during a tour of the area, pointing to dozens of tree trunks scattered on a dirt road.

Men wielding chainsaws were seen leaving when they saw visiting journalists.

In front of dozens of stumps of felled trees, Nevado lamented that her efforts to denounce loggers, helped by tip-offs from neighbors, were usually in vain.

"It makes me immensely sad, and not for my generation... but for the generations to come," she said.

(B.Hartmann--BBZ)