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The death of Magellanic penguins, victims of “animal cruelty”, advances environmental justice in Argentina

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The death of Magellanic penguins, victims of “animal cruelty”, advances environmental justice in Argentina

LETTER FROM BUENOS AIRES

The terrain, a semi-desert area, extends hundreds of meters to the cold, bright blue waters of the Atlantic Ocean in Argentine Patagonia. Its owner, a cow breeder, was found guilty, on Thursday, November 7, by the Superior Court of Justice of Chubut (south) of “aggravated harm” about the environment and “animal cruelty” towards the Magellanic penguins present in their field. An unprecedented verdict that concludes a historic trial. If the details of the sentence are to be communicated later, the prosecution requested four years in prison and financial compensation.

“This is a surprise because Argentina has a long history of environmental impunity and a penal code that does not contain environmental crimes. “This is a turning point in the country’s justice, an ecological conquest.”greets Lucas Micheloud, lawyer and co-director of the Argentine Association of Environmental Lawyers. The latter had become a civil party, along with the environmental defense NGOs Greenpeace and Fundación Patagonia Natural.

The events occurred between the months of August and December 2021, when penguins nest underground. The convicted rancher, Ricardo La Regina, now 37 years old, decides to carry out work on his land. In particular, he wants to install a fence and build a dam to contain his livestock and give them water. To do this, he bought a backhoe and excavated part of his land.

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According to the verdict, the breeder “caused irreversible damage to the native fauna and flora of this place” but also “hit a large number of live penguins of different ages, killing them, injuring them, causing them suffering and also hitting incubating eggs”. Greenpeace, for its part, considers that“About a hundred penguins, eggs and chicks and around 175 nests were destroyed, in addition to the deforestation of native vegetation”. An image taken by biologists – whose testimony was included in the file – shows a penguin lying under some branches, partially covered in soil, after the excavation. “Native vegetation is essential for the reproduction of penguins because it allows them to make their nest, protect themselves from wind, sun and predators”underlines Lucas Micheloud. According to specialists, the recomposition of the soil and flora could last between ten and twenty years.

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