BY THE JAKARTA GLOBE
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FILE PHOTO |
Jakarta, TAG – Environmental
activists have condemned the Aceh administration of Governor Zaini Abdullah
following confirmation that it planned to reverse a logging ban imposed by the
previous administration and clear up to 1.2 million hectares of protected
forest across the province.
Efendi, a spokesman for
the Coalition of People Concerned for Aceh’s Forests (KPHA), said at a media
conference in Jakarta on Thursday that the provincial administration’s special
planning committee had confirmed that the Forestry Ministry had approved of “almost
100 percent” of proposed changes to its spatial plans.
This would slash the
proportion of protected forest in the province from 68 percent to 45 percent,
and cause the loss of 1.2 million hectares of forest.
“Despite our best efforts,
communities and NGOs have been completely excluded from the development process
of the new spatial plan, which has totally lacked transparency and
accountability,” Efendi said.
He said the proposed
change in status for protected forests “is closely linked to planned expansion
of palm oil plantations and mining.”
“There is an inevitable
belief that the proposal is simply to legalize illegal activities already
taking place as several mining and palm oil concessions overlap the areas
scheduled for downgrading,” he said.
Activists also called into
question the claim by the administration that transforming large swaths of
forest into mining and oil palm concessions would lead to greater land availability
for local communities.
They noted that the area
to be allocated to the community was just over 1 percent of the planned new
opening of forest area, or 14,704 hectares, while the largest allocations would
go toward mining, at just under 1 million hectares, logging concessions
(416,086 hectares), and oil palm concessions (256,250 hectares).
They also said that the
latter concessions would cover the entire Tripa peat swamp, a protected area
that is considered an important habitat for the critically endangered Sumatran
orangutan and that has received much international attention due to illegal
clearing there by palm oil companies.
The illegal clearing is
still being investigated by the Environment Ministry and the police.
‘Extremely dangerous move’
The KPHA also warned that
in addition to the new “large-scale exploitative industrial developments,” the
spatial plan also paved the way for the construction of an extensive road
network that would cut through currently protected forests, “further disrupting
wildlife and watersheds in the region and opening up even more forests for
exploitation, both legal and illegal.”
“Famously once known as
the ‘Ladia Galaska’ road network, or the ‘Spider Web,’ for its appearance, the
plan is once again being resurrected, despite being rejected in the past by
popular demand due to the severe environmental damage it would bring,” the
group said in a statement.
Graham Usher, a landscape
protection specialist previously involved in forest mapping under the previous
Aceh governor, Irwandi Yusuf, said: “Areas that had previously been identified
as being too high or too steep for conversion, or as having inappropriate soil
types and heavy rainfall, so that under existing Indonesian regulations they
should be protected forests, have now been identified as targets for logging
concessions, roads, mining concessions and palm oil plantations.
“Opening up such forests
is an extremely dangerous move. Aceh’s people know very well that removal of
forests on such steep and unstable soils results in devastating landslides and
floods during the heavy rains that Aceh receives every year.
“The plan to clear these
forests is a serious mistake that will result in the loss of yet more innocent
lives and huge economic losses for the province.”
The activists said it was
likely that “a number of national laws have been breached” by the
administration of Governor Zaini Abdullah in drawing up the proposed changes.
Under Irwandi, large-scale logging and forest clearing were prohibited.
‘Total obliteration’
Ian Singleton, from the
Sumatran Orangutan Conservation Program, said it was not just the iconic apes
that would disappear if the spatial plan went into force.
“It is now being proposed
that Tripa lose its currently protected status altogether, and for this unique
peat swamp ecosystem and all its biodiversity and potentially hugely valuable
carbon stock to be handed over to the palm oil companies for final, total
obliteration,” he said.
“The new spatial plan does
not even acknowledge the existence of the world-renowned Leuser Ecosystem
protected area or the fact that the forests they intend to ‘unprotect’ are the
last main hope for the long-term survival of iconic Sumatran endemic species
such as the Sumatran tiger, elephant and rhinoceros. The future of each of
these species, and countless others, will be placed in immediate jeopardy if
the plans are allowed to proceed.”
Singleton added it was
ironic that after receiving tens of millions of dollars from the international
community to protect its forests, the Aceh administration “now plans to trash
them for roads, new mines, timber and oil palm concessions.”
Rudi Hadiansyah Putra, the
conservation manager for the Leuser Ecosystem Management Authority (BPKEL),
said conservationists had worked hard to protect Aceh’s forests, and that what
the provincial administration proposed doing would set back all their efforts.
“The community understand
very well from previous devastating flash floods that clearing the forests
upstream has a direct impact on the river flow and their own safety downstream,”
he said.
“The people of Aceh are no
fools. We know that when these unstable areas are cut, it directly leads to
increasing natural disasters. If even the villagers know this, why do the Aceh
government’s advisers not comprehend this simple connection?”[]
Source link:
Activists Decry Aceh Plan to End Log Ban
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March 15, 2013
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