Record 212 land and environment activists killed last year
Global Witness campaigners warn of risk of further killings during Covid-19 lockdowns
Patrick Greenfield and Jonathan Watts
Tue 28 Jul 2020 20.01 EDT
A record number of people were killed last year for defending their land and environment, according to research that highlights the routine murder of activists who oppose extractive industries driving the climate crisis and the destruction of nature.
More than four defenders were killed every week in 2019, according to an annual death toll compiled by the independent watchdog Global Witness, amid growing evidence of opportunistic killings during the Covid-19 lockdown in which activists were left as sitting ducks in their own homes.
Colombia and the Philippines accounted for half of the 212 people killed last year, a surge of nearly 30% from 164 deaths in 2018 and 11 more than the previous record in 2017. Most killings went unpunished and the true number of deaths is likely to be much higher as many go undocumented.
The mining industry was linked to the most land and environmental defender deaths in 2019, according to the report, followed by agriculture, logging and criminal gangs. Indigenous communities around the world continue to face disproportionate risks of violence, making up 40% of murdered defenders last year.
More:
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2020/jul/29/record-212-land-and-environment-activists-killed-last-year