
-
Prayers for the Dalai Lama in the heart of Mongolian Buddhism
-
Rivals ready to rock as fans flood in for Tour de France opener
-
Djokovic banks on 'home' advantage against Davis Cup teammate at Wimbledon
-
Ozzy Osbourne set for swansong at Black Sabbath hometown gig
-
Family and football unite to bid Diogo Jota farewell
-
Bombers and a 'beautiful bill' -- Trump celebrates US Independence Day
-
Mbappe 'better' and ready for Real Madrid against Dortmund at Club World Cup
-
BRICS nations to denounce Trump tariffs
-
Ghim maintains one-shot lead at PGA's John Deere Classic
-
Bayern Club World Cup clash with PSG a 'perfect storm': Kompany
-
Al Hilal showed Saudi league not just about money, says Koulibaly
-
PSG 'dead' unless they keep improving: Luis Enrique
-
MLB Cubs smash team-record eight homers to crush Cardinals
-
Mark Snow, composer of 'X Files' theme, dead at 78
-
Trump signs 'big, beautiful' bill on US Independence Day
-
US sprinter Richardson seeks to kickstart season after February injury
-
West Indies and Australia 2nd Test finely poised
-
Bosnia ends warrant for Bosnian Serb leader after questioning
-
Germany see off Poland in Women's Euro 2025 opener
-
Alcaraz into Wimbledon last 16 as Sabalenka outlasts Raducanu
-
Fluminense beat Al Hilal 2-1 to reach Club World Cup semis
-
At least 13 dead, 20 missing in Texas flash flood
-
Sabalenka outguns Raducanu to reach Wimbledon last 16
-
BRICS nations to gather without Xi, Putin
-
Heavy snow hits Turkey's northeast as wildfires rage
-
Brazil's Gabigol wins appeal in anti-doping case
-
Salah 'frightened' to return to Liverpool as fans mourn tragic Jota
-
Siraj 'loving the challenge' of leading India's attack against England
-
France says 'major issues' remain despite brandy price accord with China
-
'Always hiding': Haitian laborers fear Dominican deportation push
-
Rugby World Cup-winning Springboks coach White leaves Bulls
-
UK rock legends Oasis kick off 'historic' comeback tour
-
Alcaraz in Wimbledon last 16 as seeds tumble again
-
Kipyegon, Duplantis, Thompson highlight Eugene Diamond League
-
Australia wrest back control against West Indies
-
Erratic Alcaraz battles into Wimbledon fourth round
-
Search on for survivors of Pakistan building collapse
-
Blink and you'll miss it: Shelton wraps up match in 71 seconds
-
India on top despite Smith and Brook's hundred heroics in 2nd Test
-
Sweden beat rivals Norway at Women's Euro 2025
-
India on top despite Smith and Brook's hundred heroics in third Test
-
E.Guinea launches ICJ case against France over Paris mansion
-
Red Bull boss says Verstappen wants to stay despite Mercedes links
-
Russia brushes off talks after largest assault on Ukraine
-
Oldest surviving Tour de France yellow jersey wearer Marinelli dies at 99
-
Driven Leclerc determined to restore Ferrari to the top of F1
-
Dozens pay tribute to Liverpool star Diogo Jota in Portugal
-
Greece on high alert as heat and wind fuel fire outbreaks
-
Norris tops Silverstone practice as Horner quizzed over Verstappen
-
Brathwaite out for nought in 100th Test before West Indies rebuild

'Patrol' film exposes Nicaragua forest threat from beef industry
Surrounded by fallen trees and languid cows, illegal cattle rancher Chacalin surveys a clearing deep inside one of Nicaragua's largest remaining protected rainforests.
"When I came here, I knew it was a reserve. I just stole the land. I didn't pay for it," he says calmly, staring away from the camera.
"If they take me out of here they can take me off the land, but I don't lose money. That's how we operate."
Beginning in 2016, and over several years, filmmakers Camilo de Castro and Brad Allgood visited the Indio-Maiz Biological Reserve for a documentary about the threats of deforestation and indigenous rights violations.
The roughly 1,000-square-mile (2,600 sq km) tropical rainforest bordering Costa Rica is a biodiversity haven, and the sacred home of the indigenous Rama people, but despite legal protections, it has seen a rapid influx of illegal settlers.
After violent protests erupted in the Central American nation in 2018 -- in part triggered by fury over the government's failure to tackle a massive fire in the reserve lit by an illegal settler -- investigative journalist de Castro had to flee his home country.
In his absence, the situation in Indio-Maiz has only worsened, and President Daniel Ortega's intensifying crackdown on dissent has made it too dangerous for the filmmakers to return.
This February, de Castro was one of 94 dissidents stripped of their citizenship -- along with his mother Gioconda Belli, a prominent writer -- and he now lives in exile in Costa Rica.
Relying on Nicaraguans within the country to send updates and images via the encrypted Signal app, the directors are now premiering "Patrol" at the Mountainfilm documentary festival in Colorado, hoping to draw attention to the situation from afar.
"This is probably the last independent documentary that's gonna come out on Nicaragua in who knows how long," said de Castro.
"The government basically has put up a wall around the country so that people inside can't hear anything coming from outside, and can't share information about what's really happening in the country."
- 'Colonization' -
The documentary follows indigenous Rama and Afro-descendent Kriols as they patrol their lands via canoe and on foot through dense, treacherous jungle, avoiding blood-sucking ticks and predatory jaguars.
It chronicles their encounters with ever-swelling ranks of newly arrived illegal settlers. Many are in the pocket of wealthy cattle ranchers living outside the reserve, and are paid to clear the land before the cows arrive.
During the filming, an indigenous patrol encounters a large, sophisticated ranch that has sprung up in the rainforest, and leaders report it to police and Nicaraguan government officials.
But they are told they must pay up if they want police to investigate, while a meeting with a minister fails to materialize.
While rampant deforestation is not unique to Nicaragua, Allgood said the situation is different from places like the sprawling Amazon, because Indio-Maiz is a "small area" where "it would not be difficult to put up a barrier to prevent people from going in."
The government is "turning a blind eye -- it's in plain sight, but nobody pays attention."
Meanwhile, the land conflict has spilled into violence. Nicaragua has recently seen a string of murders of indigenous people by settlers, many of which go unpunished.
"There's a lot of racism involved," said de Castro. "I would say we're filming the last stage of 500 years of colonization in Nicaragua."
- 'Uphold the law' -
Ninety percent of deforestation in the region is driven by illegal cattle ranching, according to Christopher Jordan, Latin American director for conservation group Re:wild.
"Government corruption allows them to steal and deforest the land without consequences," he says in the film.
Beef is one of impoverished Nicaragua's largest exports. This tiny country, the size of Mississippi, is the United States' sixth-biggest global supplier.
Since 2015, a US law requiring beef to carry a "country-of-origin" label has been dropped, meaning consumers rarely know if their burgers or steaks come from animals reared on Indigenous forest lands.
While many importing companies claim to check the origin of their beef back to its original farm, de Castro and Allgood say this is not possible in Nicaragua, where the traceability process is too opaque.
"We talk about oil, we talk about mining... but the food industry is still not something that's getting enough attention," said de Castro.
"What we want is for consumers to be more wary, to ask questions when they buy beef at the supermarket."
As for the Nicaragua government?
"What we need is political will, to really make them make an example of some of these illegal cattle ranchers and throw them in jail," he said.
"Once they throw a few of them in jail, people will think twice about going in. That's what we want. We want the government to uphold the law."
P.Costa--AMWN