TODAY'S HEADLINES

3 labor officials named in 'sex-for-repatriation' scandal in Middle East

Palawan town council nixes DMCI-proposed coal plant near cockatoo sanctuary

WARNING | Heavy rains at noontime - Pagasa

TAGAY PA | Filipinos are the world's largest consumers of gin, The Economist says

Cebu Pacific flight to Naga hit by bird strike

James Cameron warns of violence over Brazil dam project

InterAksyon.com
The online news portal of TV5

WASHINGTON - Oscar-winning movie director James Cameron on Thursday said tribes in Brazil's Amazon rainforest could turn to violence to block construction of a massive dam.

"The Kayapo are going to fight," Cameron told AFP in Washington, where he was named an explorer-in-residence at National Geographic.

"They're not going to just shrug and walk away. They're the most aggressive tribe in the area" of the Xingu River basin, where the Brazilian government is forging ahead with plans to build the $11-billion Belo Monte dam, in spite of locals repeatedly lodging protests against the project.

"The Brazilian government is not listening to the indigenous community at all," Cameron said.

"They're determined to build this dam, which is going to be the third largest and probably the most inefficient dam in the world," said the director of Avatar, which tells the story of how the peaceful Na'Vi people are forced to fight against strip-miners from Earth intent on destroying Na'Vi culture on the planet Pandora, to get their hands on a precious mineral resource, unobtainium.

Since he finished working on Avatar, Cameron has made three trips to the region in the Amazon where the dam is to be built.

The Brazilian government argues that the dam is necessary to meet Brazil's growing energy needs and to drive strong economic growth, which is raising the standard of living for most Brazilians.

"They could easily solve their energy requirements through efficiency initiatives for a fraction of the cost of building the dam, and they wouldn't have to destroy so much rainforest and displace 25,000 indigenous people," Cameron said.

In April, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) asked Brazil to "immediately suspend the licensing process" for the dam, and called on it to protect indigenous peoples in the Xingu River basin whose lives and "physical integrity" would be threatened by the project.

The dam would divert 80 percent of the Xingu River's flow to an artificial reservoir, "potentially leading to the forced displacement of thousands of people," the Amazon Watch nonprofit, which fights for indigenous peoples' rights and to protect the environment in the Amazon, says on its website.

But two weeks ago, the Brazilian government granted an installation license for the Belo Monte dam, clearing the way for construction to begin as early as next month.

OTHER WORLD STORIES  


BREAKING NEWS  
National Palawan town council nixes DMCI-proposed coal plant near cockatoo sanctuary
National De Lima orders probe on 5-year delay on case of drug suspect
National Comelec sets July 22 to 31 as voters' registration dates for barangay, SK polls
Business TAGAY PA | Filipinos are the world's largest consumers of gin, The Economist says
National Mindanao floods displace more than 100,000 people
World 64 dead as early monsoon hammers northern India
Business Power crisis fears unnerve industry in booming Philippines
National 'Emong' intensifies into tropical storm, fishermen warned vs going out to sea
Special Features Can an animal be a 'surrogate' for a human organ? Japan experts mull rules on chimeric embryos
World | National SEX-FOR-REPATRIATION? | Gov't orders probe into OFW's allegations vs PH labor execs in Kuwait
World | Special Features STAND UP FOR HEALTH | Sitting increases risk of early death from heart disease - study
National GUESS | What are the top 3 rice-producing regions in the Philippines?
World Rousseff praises Brazil protests, says committed to change
World Justin Bieber involved in LA traffic mishap
World GRAND CHALLENGE | NASA enlists public in hunt for major asteroids
World World's largest all-solar-powered boat shines in NYC
Business 2 workers injured in fall from SM Aura 2nd floor
National PHOTO | Poster calling for safe return of abducted activist at Lao embassy in Makati
National LIKED | Was Dan Brown right about Manila being the gates of hell?
Business PHOTO | Philippine foundation donates LEGO blocks to schoolkids in Tondo
World | Special Features US study links pollution to autism risk
Lifestyle French sneakers Bensimon makes sprightly strides in the Philippines
Lifestyle Iconic SM Store’s shoe brands step it up with celebrities KC, Luis, and Sam
Lifestyle HOTEL OF THE WEEK | Two Seasons Coron Island Resort and Spa in Palawan