
| Southeast Asia
Top brass and timber tycoons spell doom for forests By Richel Dursin
JAKARTA - Indonesia's tropical forests are ranked third in terms of size after those in Brazil and Zaire, but they may soon slip down the list because of rampant illegal logging backed by military elements.
The nation's forests make up 10 percent of the world's forest cover. But for the last three years, they have been vanishing at an alarming rate of 2.4 to three million hectares a year - the highest deforestation rate in the world, according to the Indonesian Forum for Environment, popularly known locally as Walhi.
Experts say that in just 15 years, Indonesia's primary forests may be gone forever.
The disappearance of Indonesian forests is partly due to legal logging activities, but the sudden acceleration can be traced to a sharp rise in illegal logging, activists say. Last year, it is the estimated, 30 million cubic meters of illegal timber were produced, according to the Association of Concessions Company. In the past, the figure had been 15-20 million cubic metres. Official production is 29.5 million cubic metres
Mubariq Ahmad, executive director of the Indonesian Ecolabeling Institute (LEI), says: ''For the past two years, illegal logging activities were not done quietly anymore. A lot of looting happened in the forests and law enforcement agencies did not dare to stop people.'' He asserts that this is because of ''the involvement of the military officers. They are backing up the illegal logging and the Ministry of Forestry and Plantations cannot do anything about it.''
The involvement of various law enforcement agencies - including the military - in illegal logging operations even in national parks such as the Gunung Leuser National Park in Aceh, is well documented. It has become common knowledge that such operations are hard to stop because of the involvement of the military, ranging from backing timber tycoons to turning a blind eye to illegal logging.
Last month, a British environmentalist and her Indonesian colleague were kidnapped by illegal loggers, allegedly with the support of the military. Faith Brunskill, a member of the UK-based Environmental Investigation Agency, says she and co-worker A Ruwindrijarto, executive director of Telapak Indonesia, were investigating supposedly illegal logging operations in Tanjung Putting National Park when they were abducted and then beaten up on January 20.
According to Brunskill, their ordeal began when they were taken to meet the managers of Tanjung Lingga, which they had accused of conducting illegal logging operations in the park, one of the last known habitats of orangutans and other endangered species in Central Kalimantan, eastern Indonesia. Tanjung Lingga, however, has denied this and has accused Brunskill and Ruwindrijarto of entering its office ''without permission''.
Comments Ruwindirjarto, in an apparent reference to the company's perceived powerful backers: ''Illegal logging is not simply about destruction of the forests, but the system of corruption and wealth it creates.''
For its part, the military has come up with an excuse for not lifting a finger to stop illegal loggers. It says that ''we do not dare to take action because we are afraid of being accused of violating human rights''. The Indonesian military has always been known for its rather harsh tactics, but criticism about its dismal human rights record were voiced publicly in the country only after the resignation of President Suharto in May 1998.
Says Mubariq: ''The military is using the same argument for not taking stern action to stem violence in Ambon. Because law enforcement is very weak since political reform started, practically the military could do whatever it wants to do at the moment.''
The situation spells disaster for the country's forests, which are already suffering from a slew of defective government policies and laws. Experts say the 1967 Basic Forestry Act - recently changed into Forest Act No 41 of 1999 - and Government Regulation No 21, which are the primary legal bases for the logging concession system, are based on wrong assumptions about the extent of the different types of forests and regeneration rates.
As a result, says Longgena Ginting, head of the policy advocacy division of the Jakarta-based Walhi, ''over a 30-year period, the Indonesian concession system has been responsible for forest destruction on a massive scale''.
Meanwhile, the plantation industry has also been accused of putting pressure on natural forests, reflecting increasing industrial demand for timber and palm oil. During the past decade, the area planted to palm oil plantations has grown by about 22 percent and rubber plantations by two percent.
The government has been promoting the establishment of palm oil plantations since the 1960s to increase export revenues, meet domestic demand for cooking oil and provide employment. Permits to convert forests into plantations have recently increased dramatically. Current forest policy allows the same firm to run logging, industrial tree plantations and palm oil plantations at the same time.
Since the Asian economic crisis in 1997, the government has made a number of decisions that accelerated the rate of clearing natural forests. These include a reduction in taxes on palm oil, the liberalization of forest investment in the palm oil sector and the setting aside of 30 percent of ''state forest'' for conversion to palm oil plantations.
These days, less fear of authority has also given impoverished local communities greater courage to violate the law, confident that there will be few repercussions.
(Inter Press Service)
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