La que se mando Greempeace!!..
mear fuera del tarro es decir poco...
Muchachos ¿quienes los asesoran?
a continuación los diarios del mundo hablando de los hechos..
PatoAlf. Frente de Liberación
Animal MDP, Psicología.
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mear fuera del tarro es decir poco...
Muchachos ¿quienes los asesoran?
a continuación los diarios del mundo hablando de los hechos..
El
Ministerio de la Cultura aseguró que la intervención del grupo ambientalista
fue "ilegal, inconsulta y premeditada" y que produjo "una grave
afectación del área".
El
Ministerio de Cultura denunció el hecho ante la Fiscalía de Nasca y solicitó
impedir la salida del país de los responsables.
El
mensaje "Tiempo de cambio: el futuro es renovable" fue puesto la
madrugada del lunes debajo del geoglifo del colibrí por una decena de
activistas del grupo.
"Esta zona, declarada Patrimonio Cultural de la
Humanidad, es un área donde está estrictamente prohibido cualquier tipo de
intervención, dada la fragilidad que rodea las figuras", aseguró el
gobierno de Perú en un comunicado del Ministerio de Cultura"
Peru Is Indignant After Greenpeace Makes Its Mark on
Ancient Site
By WILLIAM NEUMANDEC. 12, 2014
CARACAS, Venezuela — An expression of concern by the
environmental group Greenpeace about the carbon footprint was marred this week
by real footprints — in a fragile, and restricted, landscape near the Nazca
lines, ancient man-made designs etched in the Peruvian desert.
The Peruvian authorities said activists from the group
damaged a patch of desert when they placed a large sign that promoted renewable
energy near a set of lines that form the shape of a giant hummingbird.
The sign was meant to draw the attention of world
leaders, reporters and others who were in Lima, the Peruvian capital, for a
United Nations summit meeting aimed at reaching an agreement to address climate
change. The meeting was scheduled to end Friday but negotiations were expected
to continue into Saturday.
Greenpeace issued a statement apologizing for the
stunt at the archaeological site, about 225 miles south of Lima. Its
international executive director, Kumi Naidoo, flew to Lima, but the Peruvian
authorities were seething over the episode, which they said had scarred one of
the country’s most treasured national symbols. “We are not ready to accept
apologies from anybody,” said Luis Jaime Castillo, the vice minister for
cultural heritage. “Let them apologize after they repair the damage.”
He added, however, that repair might not be possible.
Mr. Castillo said that about a dozen activists walked
more than a mile through the desert to place the sign, made up of large yellow
letters, near the hummingbird, one of the archaeological site’s best known
figures. Entry to the area is forbidden.
The lines, etched into the desert more than 1,000
years ago by an ancient culture known today as the Nazca, form enormous figures
spanning hundreds of feet, including birds and other animals, plants and
geometric shapes. Their purpose remains a mystery but they are believed to have
had a ceremonial use.
Mr. Castillo said that the desert around the lines is
made up of white sand capped by a darker rocky layer. By walking through the
desert, he said, the interlopers disturbed the upper layer, exposing the
lighter sand below.
“A bad step, a heavy step, what it does is that it
marks the ground forever,” he said. “There is no known technique to restore it
the way it was.”
He said that the group walked in single file through
the desert, meaning that they made a deep track in the ground. Then they spread
out in the area where they laid the letters, making many more marks over a wide
area.
“The hummingbird was in a pristine area, untouched,”
Mr. Castillo said. “Perhaps it was the best figure.”
Mr. Castillo said that the culture ministry had sent
out a team with drone aircraft equipped with cameras so that they could evaluate
the damage without entering the delicate area.
He said that the harm was both physical and symbolic.
“This stupidity has co-opted part of the identity of
our heritage that will now be forever associated with the scandal of
Greenpeace,” he said.
The sign, made of cloth letters, said, “Time for
change! The future is renewable. Greenpeace.”
Continue reading the main story Continue reading the
main story
Continue reading the main story
A video posted online shows the activists tramping
across the desert around dawn, their shoes crunching over the dry ground.
“The impact of climate change is more catastrophic
every day,” one of them says to the camera after the sign has been laid out.
In a written statement the group said it was “deeply
sorry.”
“We fully understand that this looks bad,” the
statement said. “Rather than relay an urgent message of hope and possibility to
the leaders gathering at the Lima U.N. climate talks, we came across as
careless and crass.”
The group said the stunt took place early Monday and
involved activists from Argentina, Austria, Brazil, Chile, Germany and Italy.
It said they took the letters with them when they left the area.
The group said it would cooperate with authorities.
But on Friday a spokesman in Lima, Mike Townsley, said that the activists
involved in the incident had left Peru and that the group had not given their
names to government officials.
Annie Leonard, the executive director of Greenpeace in
the United States, said the stunt showed “a complete disregard for the culture
of Peru and the importance of protecting sacred sites everywhere.” She added,
“It is a shame that all of Greenpeace must now bear.”
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