{"id":250045,"date":"2024-09-20T22:52:12","date_gmt":"2024-09-20T22:52:12","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.tamarindorentals.com\/?p=250045"},"modified":"2024-09-21T12:58:47","modified_gmt":"2024-09-21T12:58:47","slug":"costa-ricas-famous-peasant-environmentalist-alcides-parajeles","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.tamarindorentals.com\/costa-ricas-famous-peasant-environmentalist-alcides-parajeles\/","title":{"rendered":"Costa Rica’s famous peasant environmentalist, Alcides Parajeles"},"content":{"rendered":"

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Dubbed the \u201cenvironmentalist peasant,\u201d Alcides Parajeles has endured threats, harassment and, in some cases, violence as he voices his concern about the destruction of the natural environment around him. The story reads like an unbelievable soap opera involving organizations meant to help, but that are somehow ineffective at protecting environmentalists like Parajeles.<\/strong><\/p>\n

Parajeles has dedicated his life to condemning poaching, trafficking and illegal logging in the Osa Peninsula region of Costa Rica. Going against poachers and loggers for many years has put him in dangerous situations and brought unexpected political responses.<\/strong><\/p>\n

Most recently (December 2021), the Costa Rican Federation for Environmental Conservation (FECON) sent a message to Andrea Meza, Costa Rica’s Minister of Environment and Energy, on behalf of Parajeles, hoping to relieve him and his family of harassment.<\/strong><\/p>\n

The message included a reminder that Parajeles received the Guayac\u00e1n award from the Ministry of Environment and Energy (MINAE) in 2017. He continues to fight the battle \u201cdespite his advanced age and continues to actively fight to\u00a0denounce hunters, loggers and traffickers of wild animals in Osa.\u201d\u00a0<\/em>(1)<\/a>\u00a0El mensaje continu\u00f3 diciendo que el Sistema Nacional de \u00c1reas de Conservaci\u00f3n (SINAC) local lo hab\u00eda atacado verbalmente y desestim\u00f3 sus denuncias.<\/strong><\/p>\n

Meza was also told that Parajeles and his family are still receiving death threats and are being stalked by hunters. FECON questioned the Ministry to better understand why an elderly wildlife defender who was in danger and needed the support of local SINAC officials was not receiving help.<\/strong><\/p>\n

But Minister Meza did not acknowledge having received the message. The victims feel a certain amount of state abandonment after years of sending these requests for help without a solution.<\/strong><\/p>\n

A major concern is that Parajeles lives and farms among those he condemns, and they are his neighbors in Pavoncito de Sierpe. Wildlife trafficking is a lucrative business and involves organized crime gangs, making his pursuit even more dangerous.<\/strong><\/p>\n

Why fight?<\/strong><\/p>\n

Parajeles moved to the mountains when he was four years old. He remembers seeing jaguars, pumas and other wild animals in abundance. In a report published in La Naci\u00f3n, Parajeles, now in his 70s, tells how his heart broke when he saw wild animals being machine-gunned because the cats ate a rancher’s pig or calf. Now the number of jaguars and pumas is significantly reduced, not only because of the killing but also because of trafficking.\u00a0(3)<\/a><\/strong><\/p>\n

If you take a photo of Parajeles, you can see the sadness on his face. His actions prove the love in his heart for his beloved mountain ecosystem and the need to preserve it.<\/strong><\/p>\n

His name is well known in Costa Rica’s courts, the Constitutional Court and the Legislative Assembly, where he denounces illegal hunting and environmental destruction. He has also exposed and denounced government officials for not doing their jobs.<\/strong><\/p>\n

Like all environmentalists, Parajeles is motivated to provide a better place for his children and grandchildren. He hopes they will continue the tradition and use what he has taught them about the environment. If these current practices of destruction are not stopped, there will be no nature left for them, not as he once knew.<\/strong><\/p>\n

Parajeles has a lot of knowledge to share and he does so freely with researchers, politicians, park rangers and conservation workers. To go further, he lends his 600-hectare farm to researchers studying felines on the Osa Peninsula.\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n

Others in the battle<\/strong><\/p>\n

Many of those who have fought for the protection of the Costa Rican environment became victims of threats against them. Let us remember these brave environmentalists:<\/strong><\/p>\n