• Río San Juan Wildlife Refuge in southeastern Nicaragua has suffered a wave of deforestation in recent years, fueled by land deals that allow settlers to clear the rainforest for farming, mining and cattle ranching.
  • Without government support, Indigenous and Afro-descendant communities have patrolled the forests on their own but are overwhelmed by the number of people settling in the area.
  • Some residents have crossed the border into Costa Rica due to security concerns.
  • Recently, the government also authorized more dredging on the San Juan River, despite losing a previous case about dredging at the International Court of Justice.

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  • Jim East@slrpnk.netOP
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    8 hours ago

    I was thinking of this again, and the incredible price of $4-$12 per hectare could have been an amazing opportunity to reforest the cut areas with a food forest and live sustainably on that land while protecting the native trees that were still standing, using the existing private land ownership system against the very people who wanted to destroy the forest… I wonder if anyone at all took advantage of that opportunity.