Waterways in Brazil’s Manaus choked by tons of trash

Smoke rising from an illegal fire destroying Amazon rainforest in Brazil, where deforestation has reached a record high in 2022. (AFP)
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Updated 02 July 2022
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Waterways in Brazil’s Manaus choked by tons of trash

  • From January to May, city workers have removed 4,500 tons of trash, most of which could have been recycled instead of being thrown in the river

MANAUS: In Manaus, the largest city in Brazil’s Amazon rainforest, tons of stinking trash fill the canals and streams, giving one the feeling that they’re visiting a post-apocalyptic wasteland.

On the west side of the city, in a poor neighborhood where homes have been erected on stilts, a worker uses an excavator to scoop up a bucket-load of bottles, pieces of plastic and even home appliances that have been tossed in the water.

Not far from the city’s main port, municipal workers wearing orange uniforms gather garbage from a boat and pile it onto a big barge floating on the Rio Negro, one of the Amazon River’s main tributaries.

With the rising water levels signaling an end to the rainy season, the mounds of trash are often intermingled with leaves and tree branches.

Each day, nearly 30 tons of debris is plucked from the water. In some areas, the water is almost completely covered.

The massive influx of trash to Manaus’s waterways occurs around this time every year, but city authorities believe the situation has gotten worse in recent weeks.

From January to May, city workers have removed 4,500 tons of trash, most of which could have been recycled instead of being thrown in the river.

“The people who live on the water’s edge throw garbage straight into the streams... few people put it in the trash,” says Antonino Pereira, a 54-year-old Manaus resident who complains that the stench is unbearable.

According to the city’s undersecretary of sanitation, Jose Reboucas, if the population was more aware of the costs associated with littering, the city could save $190,000 per month.

“The awareness of the population will be very beneficial for our city and especially for our environment,” he said.

The Amazonian region is also facing a major threat from deforestation, with more than 3,750 square kilometers of jungle chopped down since the beginning of the year.


Trump threatens military operation against Colombia, after Venezuela raid

Updated 05 January 2026
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Trump threatens military operation against Colombia, after Venezuela raid

  • Trump told reporters ‍aboard Air Force ‍One, in an ‍apparent reference to Colombia’s President Gustavo Petro

ABOARD AIR FORCE ONE: US President Donald Trump on Sunday threatened military action against Colombia’s government, telling reporters that such an operation “sounds good to ‌me.”
“Colombia is ‌very sick, ‌too, ⁠run ​by ‌a sick man, who likes making cocaine and selling it to the United States, and he’s not going to be ⁠doing it very long,” ‌Trump told reporters ‍aboard Air Force ‍One, in an ‍apparent reference to Colombia’s President Gustavo Petro.
Asked directly whether the US would pursue ​a military operation against the country, Trump answered, “It sounds ⁠good to me.”
The comments came after the United States captured Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro in an audacious raid and whisked him to New York to face drug-trafficking charges.