Ecocide in Venezuela: the Chavista dictatorship caused an environmental disaster with the illegal exploitation of natural resources
Article by Helen Hernandez, OI Canadian | January 16, 2022
Article by Helen Hernandez, OI Canadian | January 16, 2022
Article by Evan Ellis, Small Wars Journal | January 14, 2022
Article by Patrick Bele, Le Figaro (Page 14) | December 29, 2021
Article by Ryan Berg & Henry Ziemer, CSIS | December 20, 2021
Article by Patrick Mulholland, The New Statesman | November 24, 2021 (Mentions SOSOrinoco)
“Solidaridad is an international civil society organization with over 50 years of experience in developing solutions to make communities more resilient — from our early roots supporting repressed communities in Latin America to our current work fostering more sustainable supply chains. We currently work in over 40 countries, on five continents, through eight independently supervised regional offices.”
Article by Results for Development | November 17, 2021 (Mentions SOSOrinoco; Panel with Cristina Burelli)
Investigation by InsightCrime | November 17, 2021
Report by the OECD I September 8, 2021
Article by Juan Camilo Jaramillo, InsightCrime | August 18, 2021 (Mentions SOSOrinoco)
Three years after SOSOrinoco started to inform the World Heritage Centre and publishing multiple reports about the critical illegal mining situation, the Maduro Regime finally sent a report on Canaima. The World Heritage Centre emitted a resolution that was approved without discussion or amendments on July 23, 2021
Article by YaleEnvironment360 | August 5, 2021
Our position on
the Orinoco Mining Arc
The purpose of SOSOrinoco is to shed light on the existing body of work regarding the situation in the Amazonia and Orinoquia regions of Venezuela, to raise awareness of the tragedy that is occurring and to outline some urgent measures that need to be taken in order to halt the unfolding human and environmental disaster.