I'm Cathy Kay in Washington. Welcome to BBC World News. Outrage over the rising price of fuel spreads around the world. Today it's fishermen all across Europe. They say they can't even afford to take their boats out of port. A furious effort in China to keep so-called quake lakes from inundating cities and towns in the valleys below. Tens of thousands have already fled to higher ground. One of the last tribes cut off from the modern world is found and photographed in the Amazon rainforest. And they don't appear to appreciate it. Music Around the world tonight it seems that more and more people are reaching breaking point over the cost of fuel. Tuesday it was British truckers blocking roads to express their outrage. Today fishermen all across Europe left their boats and took to the streets. You know how angry it makes you to pay 50 or 60 dollars to fill your car's gas tank. Well imagine operating a big fishing boat in say Spain. That now costs between 5 and 7 thousand dollars a day. Mainly due to huge oil costs. The BBC's Mark Mardell reports on Tuesday's protest from Brussels. A distress flare held aloft by a Belgian fisherman not lost at sea but stranded on land by the high cost of fuel. Demonstrators taking their frustration out on an oil barrel. The protest was outside the Flemish parliament in Brussels. All over the continent there have been demonstrations each with their own national flavour. But there's a common European complaint. The problem is the fuel prices are too high, the fish prices are too low. I think the system is not good. I think the system destroys all fishermen, also lorry drivers and everything. There have been protests all over Europe. In Madrid around 10 thousand Spanish fishermen demonstrated and handed out tons of free fish to pensioners. In Italy fishing boats along the Adriatic were laid up. Striking fishermen mended their nets but wouldn't go to sea. And in France where the fishing protests started roads into ports are still being blockaded. In Britain lorry drivers are already taken to the streets stopping traffic moving to make their feelings clear. In Germany dairy farmers are on strike too. Pumping milk away under the curious gaze of the animals that produced it. They're against changes to the common agricultural policy. They're against changes to the common agricultural policy.