More than a million Brazilians have been diagnosed with COVID-19, many of them indigenous people in the Amazon rainforest.
Lars Lovold, former director of Rainforest Foundation Norway, said the pandemic caused by the new coronavirus will affect an already precarious region.
Lisley Lemos, a biologist working in the Amazon rainforest, told Zenger the pandemic is hitting Tefé, where she lives, very hard.
The Amazon, the world’s largest tropical rainforest, stretches across eight South American countries and has lost 17% of its forest cover in the last 50 years, according to the World Wildlife Fund.
The post WATCH: Stars gather for online festival to combat hunger in Amazon rainforest appeared first on Zenger News.