Category Archives: Paraguay

El Chaco in Trouble

The Council on Hemispheric Affairs (COHA) blog has a very interesting post on destructive land practices in the Paraguayan Chaco.  Here’s a brief snippet (see the full story here):

In Paraguay, the Ayoreo people are fighting for their very survival. These indigenous people are struggling to save their ancestral home in the Chaco region from cattle companies, farmers and religious sects who are moving into the region and clearing the land. New arrivals do this to make the land suitable for farming and grazing cattle. The combination of burning and then bulldozing the land leaves the region barren.

The Chaco region in southwestern Paraguay is one of the most inhospitable lands in South America; while it composes 60 percent of the country’s area, it is inhabited by only two percent of the Paraguayan population. Popular filmmaker and conservationist David Attenborough has praised the beauty of Chaco calling it “one of the last great wilderness areas left in the world” and called for its protection due to the many plants and animals that inhabit its dense forests.

 

 

Finally Finality

Most people in the United States have never heard of the Chaco War, a three-year battle waged between Bolivia and Paraguay from 1932 to 1935 for control of the Gran Chaco region in central South America.  But for the peoples of Bolivia and Paraguay, it has been a source of tension for decades.  On April 28, however, Bolivian President Evo Morales and his counterpart in Paraguay, Fernando Lugo, finally agreed on an international boundary.  The occasion was marked by much rhetoric about a new beginning for relations between Bolivia and Paraguay, whose leaders seemed genuinely enthused. 

-NF

Hat Tip: Latin American Herald Tribune