<Anchor>

Fires continue for three weeks in the Amazon rainforest, known as the lungs of the earth, raising international concerns. The Brazilian authorities decided to use their troops to evolve late.

I am a labor journalist.

<Reporter>

Flames and smoke soar in huge jungles.

There is a fire in the lungs of the Earth, the Amazon rainforest in South America.

[Ibonite Pereira / Northeastern Brazil: I can't breathe or sleep. It's really bad, sometimes it's hard to breathe, so I can't eat.]

In neighboring Bolivia, more than 15 times the size of Seoul's area was burned and smoke spread over Argentina.

As the size of fire grows enough to be confirmed in space, there is growing concern of the international community.

France's President Macron called attention to "our house is burning," and Trump expressed his willingness to help forest fires.

More than 73,000 wildfires were fired in Brazil by August, and environmentalists criticize the Brazilian authorities for causing a disaster through reckless logging and clearing, permitting Amazon's commercial development.

Some have voiced that they should not negotiate free trade with South America until they withdraw their development policy.

President Boussonaru has insisted that the move is a conspiracy of the international community to stop Brazil's development, but he has endorsed the deployment of more than 44,000 troops in seven state firefighting operations.