Journeyman Pictures | The politics driving extinction in the Galápagos Islands (2005) @journeyman | Uploaded May 2024 | Updated October 2024, 18 hours ago.
Survival of the Fittest (2005): A violent dispute between fishermen and park rangers is threatening the Galápagos Islands' wildlife. Some species have already disappeared.
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Throwing molotov cocktails and beating park rangers with clubs, hoards of angry fishermen storm the rangers' headquarters. "The rangers have passed laws to cause the fishing sector to disappear," complains spokesman Rogelio Huaycho. The fishermen claim they're locked in a battle for survival with the wildlife on the islands. But rangers are dismayed that fishermen are using their disproportionate political influence to overturn conservation edicts. "I don't think things have been any worse ever in the National Park," laments former Park director Fernando Ortiz. The first species are already disappearing, rangers have been attacked and anti poaching patrols stopped. The worry is that things will get worse. As Oritz fears: "I think conservation will be history."
ABC Australia – Ref. 2629
Survival of the Fittest (2005): A violent dispute between fishermen and park rangers is threatening the Galápagos Islands' wildlife. Some species have already disappeared.
WATCH ON OUR WEBSITE:
journeyman.tv/film/2629
Like us on Facebook: facebook.com/journeymanpictures
Follow us on Twitter:
twitter.com/JourneymanNews
twitter.com/JourneymanVOD
Follow us on Instagram: instagram.com/journeymanpictures
Throwing molotov cocktails and beating park rangers with clubs, hoards of angry fishermen storm the rangers' headquarters. "The rangers have passed laws to cause the fishing sector to disappear," complains spokesman Rogelio Huaycho. The fishermen claim they're locked in a battle for survival with the wildlife on the islands. But rangers are dismayed that fishermen are using their disproportionate political influence to overturn conservation edicts. "I don't think things have been any worse ever in the National Park," laments former Park director Fernando Ortiz. The first species are already disappearing, rangers have been attacked and anti poaching patrols stopped. The worry is that things will get worse. As Oritz fears: "I think conservation will be history."
ABC Australia – Ref. 2629