Afro-Colombians fight the effects of gold mining through biodiversity projects in a violent region

Dioselina Palacios, part of Asociacion Nuestra Casa Comun, or Our Community House Association, poses for a photo while reforesting an area near Paimado, Colombia, Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2024. (AP Photo/Ivan Valencia)

SAN ISIDRO, Colombia (AP) — In an outdoor classroom surrounded by snake specimens preserved in jars, teacher Melqui Mosquera proudly talks about the nature reserve he set up in a Colombian region environmentally devastated by illegal mining.

There are fish ponds with species native to the northwestern Choco region that were wiped out of the Atrato River due to contamination. A walk uphill leads to crystal water streams teeming with fish, jungle vegetation and chirping birds — a rare sound in many parts of the river now as wildlife has been pushed deep into the canopy by the loud machinery.

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