BY THE JAKARTA POST
Banda
Aceh, TAG – Smoke rising from several spots scattered throughout more than 61,000
hectares of carbon-rich Tripa peat swamp forests in Nagan Raya regency, Aceh,
could be easily seen from a Cessna 208 Caravan aircraft flying low above the
area on Thursday last week.
Onboard the airplane were a number of top officials from agencies tasked with investigating a case involving palm oil company PT Kallista Alam, which was alleged to be responsible for the fires that have threatened the ecosystem of about 200 orangutans living in the area.
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Smoke rises from the Tripa peat swamp in Aceh's Nagan Raya district - JP PHOTO |
Onboard the airplane were a number of top officials from agencies tasked with investigating a case involving palm oil company PT Kallista Alam, which was alleged to be responsible for the fires that have threatened the ecosystem of about 200 orangutans living in the area.
The case also caught the attention of
the global community and has tainted the reputation of President Susilo Bambang
Yudhoyono, who has only recently returned from the Rio +20 Summit where he
touted his green initiatives, which include programs like a moratorium on
deforestation.
A petition signed by concerned
individuals from around the world, questioning the Indonesian government’s
ability to halt the environmental destruction at Tripa, have prompted the
authorities to take action.
The police, the Environment Ministry and
the Forestry Ministry are all on the case, with the Presidential Working Unit
for the Supervision and Management of Development (UKP4) pushing for action.
The UKP4’s visit to the site was part of
a move to examine the situation on the ground and collect evidence against the
palm oil company.
Technicalities in the law, however, have
hamstrung the investigation.
Aerial photographs of the Tripa peat
swamp, for example, cannot be used as evidence by the investigation team.
“Based on the Information and
Transaction Law, photographs can be only be used as evidence if they are backed
up by an official report from the investigation and direct [confirmation and]
testimonies from employees from the company who joined the trip,” the
Environment Ministry’s investigation division head, Shaifuddin Akbar, said at
the Cut Nyak Dien airport in Nagan Raya last week after wrapping up the aerial
inspection. PT Kallista Alam’s employees were unavailable to take part in the
task force’s investigative fly-over.
Akbar added that the team also had
conducted a ground check to complete their investigative report.
Environment Ministry’s head investigator
Sudariyono said that his team found strong indications that PT Kallista
Alam, had deliberately burned the peat swamp to convert the area to an oil
palm plantation.
“First, an aerial view showed a pattern
to the burning of the forest, a strong indication that it was planned. Second,
we could see that the company had done nothing to put out the fire, let alone
implement preventive measures against fire. We found no personnel or fire
fighting equipment stationed in the area.
Sudariyono said that all offenses were
found in peatland protected by a governmental regulation.
“Our ground check found that Rawa Tripa
was a peatland with a depth of three meters or more, meaning that it is
protected under a 1990 presidential decree,” Sudariyono said.
He said that the investigation team was
expected to file a criminal and civil suit against PT Kallista Alam and seek
damages for causing environmental destruction in the area.
National Police director for special
crimes Brig. Gen. Gatot Subiyaktoro said that preliminary findings indicated
that the company had violated Law No. 18/2004 on plantations by conducting
illegal land clearing, burning land and planting oil palms without permits.
He added that the police also found
irregularities in the issuance of the plantation’s permit.
Then Aceh governor Irwandi Yusuf granted
the permit to the company on Aug. 25, 2011, contradicting Presidential
Instruction No. 10/2011 on the moratorium for new permits in primary forests
and peatland conversion.
Gatot said that Irwandi, who recently
lost the local election in April to Zaini Abdullah, likely broke the law by
overstepping his legal authority, as the issuance of such permit only needed
approval from a regent.
“To pursue our investigation, we will
question experts on plantation and state administration soon,” Gatot said.
The UKP4 has recommended PT Kallista
Alam’s permit be revoked.
Representatives from several NGOs,
including the Aceh chapter of the Indonesian Forum for the Environment (Walhi),
the Aceh Legal Aid Institute, the Leuser Ecosystem Management Body (BPKEL) and
Wetlands International, have demanded the government shut down water canals in
the area that were used by the company for irrigation to prevent further
degradation of the peatland.
The Tripa peat swamp was included in the
Forestry Ministry’s latest “Indicative Moratorium Map” of 65,282,006 hectares
of natural forests and peatland that are considered off-limits for commercial
activities.
The map
serves as a guideline for local administrations when issuing licenses for
forest clearance for commercial purposes.[]
Graft Suspected in Palm Oil Conversion
Reviewed by theacehglobe
on
July 10, 2012
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