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Brazil to accept G7 Amazon aid if Macron withdraws ‘insults’

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A tract of Amazon jungle is seen burning as it is being cleared by loggers and farmers in Iranduba, Amazonas state, Brazil [Bruno Kelly/Reuters
A day after the G7 countries pledged $22 million to help fight the forest fires that have been ravaging the Amazon for more than three weeks,Brazil President Jair Bolsonaro came out on Tuesday saying that wants French President Emmanuel Macron to retract “insults” against him before he will countenance accepting the offer.

The two leaders have been entangled in a war of words that has taken a personal angle in recent days, with Bolsonaro mocking Macron’s wife on Facebook and accusing the French leader of disrespecting Brazil’s sovereignty.

Macron called Bolsonaro a liar, and said that Brazilian women are probably ashamed of their president.

The issue of whether or not to accept foreign money has also become a tricky one within Bolsonaro’s government, with various cabinet members taking differing stances on the offer.

Initially, as the fires gained global headlines, Bolsonaro said Brazil did not have the resources to tackle the blazes. Then, in the wake of the G7 offer, his Environment Minister Ricardo Salles called the aid “welcome.”

However, on Monday evening, Bolsonaro’s Chief of Staff Onyx Lorenzoni said Brazil would reject the G7 offer, according to news website G1, although his office said that was his personal view.

Speaking to reporters in Brasilia on Tuesday, Bolsonaro, whose popularity has been falling domestically according to recent polls said “First of all, Macron has to withdraw his insults. He called me a liar. Before we talk or accept anything from France he must withdraw these words then we can talk.

The French president’s office declined to comment.

Macron made the offer of financial aid at the G7 summit in the southern French town of Biarritz on Monday after leaders had discussed the fires ravaging the world’s largest tropical rainforest – often dubbed “the lungs of the world”.

The number of blazes recorded across the Brazilian Amazon has risen 79% this year through Aug. 25, according to Brazil’s space research agency. The fires are not limited to Brazil, with at least 10,000 square kilometers (about 3,800 square miles) burning in Bolivia, near its border with Paraguay and Brazil.

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