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Flash in a pan

By Noel Vera
Movie Review
Ricki and The Flash
Directed by Jonathan Demme

South Pacific: half theater, half concert

By Jasmine Agnes T. Cruz
Theater/Concert
South Pacific in Concert

Snow White and the Evil Escalante

By Jasmine Agnes T. Cruz
Theater
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
Presented by Repertory Philippines’

Liver cancer must be dealt with

Medicine Cabinet
By Reiner W. Gloor

THE number of Filipinos dying due to liver cancer may double in the coming years from the present average figure of 20 deaths per day, according to health research statistics.

Rate of global forest loss halved: UN report

DURBAN, SOUTH AFRICA — The rate at which the world is losing its forests has halved, but an area of woodland the size of South Africa has still been lost since 1990, a United Nations (UN) report revealed on Monday.

Improvement has been seen around the globe, even in the key tropical rainforests of South America and Africa, according to a surprisingly upbeat Forest Resources Assessment (FRA), which is released every five years.

Despite the good news, it points out that since 1990, the world had lost forests covering some 129 million hectares — an area the size of South Africa.

“Even though, globally, the extent of the world’s forest continues to decline… the rate of net forest loss has been cut by over 50%,” said the report by the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).

The assessment was released at the World Forestry Congress in the South African port city of Durban, host to the 14th edition of the conference.

“FRA 2015 shows a very encouraging tendency towards a reduction in the rates of deforestation and carbon emissions from forests and increases in capacity for sustainable forest management,” said FAO Director-General Jose Graziano da Silva.

“The direction of change is positive, with many impressive examples of progress in all regions of the world.”

WWF International director for forests, Rod Taylor, said the report presented “good news at one level, but the question is how sustainable that is.”

“Even with the reduced rate we still have unacceptable levels of forest loss,” Taylor told AFP.

WWF said that without “bold and urgent action” up to 170 million hectares — the size of Germany, France, Spain and Portugal combined — could be wiped out in the next 20 years.

Greenpeace International executive director Kumi Naidoo told the congress that “little progress has been made in fulfilling pledges to… completely eliminate deforestation.”

PLANTED FORESTS INCREASE
Apart from offering oxygen, fuel and building material, trees store important quantities of carbon, which, if released, contribute to global warming.

Halting deforestation is a key focus of UN negotiations for a global pact to limit disastrous climate change caused by greenhouse gas emissions.

The UN talks are designed to secure a deal to be signed by world leaders in Paris in December.

In 1990 the world had 4,128 million hectares of forest covering 31.6% of the global land area, the forest report said.

By 2015 this had decreased to 3,999 million hectares, covering 30.6% — a net loss of some 129 million hectares.

The net annual rate of loss — which takes into account the planting of new forests — has slowed from -0.18% in the 1990s to -0.08% over the last five years.

Planted forest area has increased by more than 110 million hectares since 1990 and now accounts for seven percent of the world’s forest area.

The biggest loss of forests occurred in the tropics, particularly in South America and Africa, although even there the rate of loss “has decreased substantially in the past five years,” the report said.

Natural forest will probably continue to decline, but “due to growing demand for forest products and environmental services, the area of planted forests is likely to continue to increase in coming years.”

The conclusions raised questions of whether alarm bells sounded over forest loss have been overplayed, but the report’s team leader, Kenneth MacDicken, said the FRA had led a change in attitude over deforestation.

“The FRA has since 1948 reported forest area change — including the loss of forest area in the tropics.

“Actions in response to this information have helped slow the rate of forest loss — and in some countries have resulted in increased forest area,” MacDicken told AFP from his base in Rome.

Better information from new forest inventories had also “greatly improved our understanding of forest change”, he said. — AFP

Native tribe fights to save Boreal forest in Quebec

“If my grandfather knew,” says the deputy leader of the Cree tribe, one of 11 indigenous ethnic groups present in Quebec.

The flyover of the Boreal forest, pockmarked by clear-cuts, both saddens her and toughens her resolve to end deforestation in the region.

“We don’t own this land… as Cree, we know that we’re stewards of the land, (and) we’re here to protect the land,” she said.

Ms. Gull’s tribal village of Waswanipi, about 1,000 kilometers north of Montreal, has been fighting for years to preserve some 13,000 square kilometers of pristine forests in the Broadback river valley. Loggers have already cut swathes through 90% of adjacent lands.

For the Cree, protecting the forest also means protecting the reindeer, moose and other wildlife being pushed further and further north by logging and climate change.

The Cree grand chief signed an accord with the Quebec government in July to preserve 9,134 square kilometers of woodland caribou habitat along the 450-kilometer Broadback, which flows through the taiga to the Arctic.

But Waswanipi trappers say the deal does too little to safeguard their land. They point out that half of the areas protected from logging under the accord were already off-limits to forestry firms.

Since the government of Quebec unveiled a conservation plan for the north that paradoxically opened the door to more logging along the Broadback river, the town of Waswanipi has felt under siege.

NOT OURS TO SELL
Forestry firm representatives have approached Don Saganash about his hunting lands in the area.

“They came to talk to me about building a bridge because the river is narrower here, but the Broadback is not for sale,” he said of the crystal clear river where sturgeon, pike and walleye swim.

Seeing trucks loaded with logs drive by “is like getting stabbed in the gut,” said the retired ambulance driver.

“My father used to say: the land is not ours to sell. God provided us with the land to live in harmony with nature.”

The forest is at the heart of these northern peoples’ identity. Newborns are baptized in ceremonies that include walking on pine needles and circling a conifer placed in front of a tipi.

For generations, native hunters have kept a watch over this land, keeping tallies on the fauna and inspecting trap lines.

Snowmobiles may have replaced dogs and sleds and boats with outboard motors displaced canoes, but many of the 16,000 Crees living in Quebec still uphold their nomadic ancestors’ traditions, even though they were themselves forced to settle down four decades ago.

The boreal forest is seen on the Broadback River on August 18, 2015, in Waswanipi, Canada. AFP PHOTO/CLEMENT SABOURIN
The boreal forest is seen on the Broadback River on August 18, 2015, in Waswanipi, Canada. AFP PHOTO/CLEMENT SABOURIN

‘SAVE THE ROADBACK’
At that time, the Quebec government started building massive hydro-electric dams in the north to supply cheap electricity to the province and northeastern US states.

In exchange for supporting these projects, the Cree gained some political independence and significant funding.

Quebec also recognized their historical hunting rights but the state maintained control of natural resources within its borders.

“The Quebec government does have the right to come here and extract these resources, but these aren’t just resources, it’s a way of life,” said Ms. Gull.

From a climate perspective, “the Boreal forest cover is essential for everybody,” she added.

To help them in their fight against forestry firms, the Cree recruited Greenpeace, which on this late August day deployed a massive banner in the outback, legible from the sky that reads: “Save the Broadback!”

Greenpeace’s activism, however, has angered the Quebec government and it is embroiled in litigation with forestry giant Resolu Forest Products that alleges it was defamed by the group. The company is seeking Can$7 million in damages.

The feud led one of Europe’s largest publishers Axel Springer in late August to stop buying paper produced in Quebec, saying it no longer felt comfortable supporting a forestry firm that is battling aboriginals and environmental activists.

Hoping to increase pressure on other pulp and paper buyers, Greenpeace invited foreign journalists to tour the forest to see the impact of logging firsthand.

“Few people in Quebec have ever laid eyes on such pristine forestland, it is truly something very rare indeed,” said Greenpeace biologist Nicolas Mainville.

“We have to take a strong stand when it comes to protecting the forest from a company that wants to build a bridge over this river to get to the other side and cut down one of the last virgin forests in Quebec.”

Mr. Saganash long struggled alone to safeguard his ancestral lands, but now he stands supported by several aboriginal groups.

And he has vowed to “fight to the death” to protect his lands from logging. — AFP

A staycation in Makati

By Zsarlene B. Chua

CITY GARDEN GRAND — a barely year-old four-star hotel which stands across its three-star counterpart — boasts of 311 rooms featuring native materials such as narra and two chandeliers made of capiz shells (windowpane oysters), all in order to identify as a Filipino brand.

Korea: ready for travelers

By Zsarlene B. Chua

“KOREA TOURISM is back to normal,” was the first line in the statement released by the Korea Tourism Organization (KTO) during its Korea Incentive Roadshow which rolled out on Sept. 3 at the Fairmont Hotel in Makati City.

Exercise as medicine

By Zsarlene B. Chua

EXERCISE is Medicine (EIM) is a global health initiative spearheaded by the American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM) in 2007 aiming to “have every patient receive counselling and referral around exercise,” said Nicole R. Keith, associate professor of Kinesiology at the Indiana University school of medicine.

The parallel worlds of Ramon Magsaysay awardees

By Pola Esguerra del Monte

Gawad Plaridel for Ricky Lee

By Susan Claire Agbayani

Ricardo Lee, the Philippines’ most prominent screenwriter and one of most influential figures in the film industry, was awarded the 2015 Gawad Plaridel by the University of the Philippines’ College of Mass Communications (UP CMC) last week.

PETA looks back (and forward)

By Jasmine Agnes T. Cruz

THE Philippine Educational Theater Association (PETA), in its long history, has found a new, revamped identity in the limelight because of their original Filipino musical Rak of Aegis.