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Keywords
Actions and protests
Day
Forests (campaign title)
Indigenous People
Indoors
KWCI (GPI)
Meetings
National costumes
Small group of people
Tribal dresses
Brazlian Indigenous Leaders Meet with UK Companies in London
The indigenous delegation meets with UK companies including Tesco, Asda, Sainsbury’s, Morrisons, Iceland and the British Retail Consortium to discuss the impact soya grown for animal feed is having on Brazil’s forests, Indigenous lives and protected areas. Burger King, KFC and McDonald’s and Cargill were invited to the meeting, organised by Greenpeace, but declined to attend, as did UK meat giants 2 Sisters Food Group, Moy Park and Avara Foods, some of the biggest users of soya.
Restrictions
IMAGES OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLE FROM BRAZIL MUST NOT BE USED FOR FUNDRAISING PURPOSES.
Unique identifier:
GP0STU7RR
Type:
Image
Shoot date:
15/11/2019
Locations:
Europe
,
London
,
United Kingdom
Credit line:
© Chris J Ratcliffe / Greenpeace
Size:
5568px × 3712px 13MB
Ranking:
★★★★ (E)
Containers
Shoot:
Brazilian Indigenous Leaders in the UK
Indigenous Leaders from across Brazil hand in their own letter and 200,000-strong petition to Downing Street, asking the UK government to suspend trade talks with Brazil until the Amazon and its people are protected.
Their letter will call on the UK government to put Indigenous rights, human rights and environmental protections first in any future trade talks or deals with the Brazilian government. They are also meeting with UK companies including Tesco, Asda, Sainsbury’s, Morrisons, Iceland and the British Retail Consortium to discuss the impact soya grown for animal feed is having on Brazil’s forests, Indigenous lives and protected areas. Burger King, KFC and McDonald’s were invited to the meeting, organised by Greenpeace, but declined to attend, as did UK meat giants 2 Sisters Food Group, Moy Park and Avara Foods, some of the biggest users of soya.
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