Brazil’s government
will hand out nine million condoms for free around Rio de Janeiro during
the Olympics in August, a push meant to encourage safe s** and also
defend the Amazon rainforest.
Rio Olympics 2016
Rio Olympics 2016
Rio’s local Olympic organizing committee said about 450,000 of the
sustainably-produced condoms would be destined for athletes and staff
housed in the Olympic Village.
The rest will be made widely available to the many visitors who will be
arriving in the city in just a few weeks, the Health Ministry said.
All the condoms to be distributed are produced by Natex, a factory in
the western Amazonian state of Acre, deep in the rainforest near
Brazil’s border with Bolivia.
The factory, run by the Acre state government, uses latex gathered from
Amazon rubber trees by tappers who are employed by a government-run
program designed to protect their traditional livelihood, foster
sustainable use of the rainforest and deter illegal loggers.
The tappers see themselves as guardians of the rainforest.
On a recent outing, Raimundo Mendes de Barros, a 71-year-old lifelong
rubber tapper with a stark white beard, gathered the milky-white latex
dripping into metal buckets hooked at the base of countless trees.
Above, the tropical sun was filtered by the Amazon canopy.
Barros spoke with pride about the fierce fight he and other sustainable
rubber tappers wage to maintain their craft.
“Our condom factory, aside from guaranteeing a fair price for the
rubber, employs hundreds,” he said.
“It gives the world a product – the condom – that will be very present
there in Rio, to fight disease and help with birth control.”
For decades, tappers like Barros have been on the front line of pushing
Brazilian leaders to do more to halt deforestation, which is mostly
caused by the illegal clearing of forest for ranching, soy farms and
timber extraction.
The fight has sometimes come at a heavy cost as farmers and loggers have
sometimes retaliated with hired guns. Scores of people have been killed
over the years trying to protect the forest, most notably the
internationally known environmentalist and rubber tapper Chico Mendes.
His 1988 murder in Xapuri, where the condom factory now stands, helped
galvanise the government to take serious measures to battle
deforestation and the violence against Amazon defenders.
For several years Brazil’s Health Ministry has distributed millions of
condoms from the factory for free at big events around Brazil – most
notably the annual bacchanal of Carnival.
Source:Vanguard News
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