Indigenous Dayak Community Fights Palm Logging in Indonesia MUARE TAE, Indonesia -- The fate of a Dayak community deep in the interior of East Kalimantan demonstrates how Indonesia must safeguard the rights of indigenous people who practise a sustainable lifestyle if it is to meet ambitious targets to reduce emissions from deforestation, alleges an organisation that specialises in investigating environmental crimes.

The London-based Environmental
Investigation Agency (EIA) claim Dayak Benuaq of Muara Tae, in West Kutai
Kabupaten, today face a two-pronged assault from palm oil companies
aggressively expanding into their ancestral forests. Together with Indonesian
NGO Telapak, the community is manning a forest outpost around the clock in a
last ditch attempt to save it from destruction.
The London-based Environmental
Investigation Agency (EIA) has witnessed at first-hand the Dayak Benuaq’s
struggle, and how their sustainable use of forests could help Indonesia deliver
on its ambitious targets to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
EIA Forests Team Leader Faith
Doherty said: “There are more than 800 families in Muara Tae relying on the forests
for their food, water, medicine, culture and identity. Put simply, they have to
keep this forest in order to survive.
“The rhetoric from the President of Indonesia on curbing emissions by
reducing deforestation is strong but on the front line, where indigenous
communities are putting their lives at risk to protect forests, action is
sorely missing.”

President Yudhoyono has
pledged to reduce carbon emissions across the archipelago by 26 per cent by
2020 against a business-as-usual baseline, alongside delivering substantial
economic growth.
Plantation expansion will inevitably
be a significant element of growth, but it has historically been a major driver
of emissions and it is widely acknowledged that in order avoid them, expansion
must now be directed to ‘degraded’ lands.
The EIA believe that as a result of
weak spatial planning, however, the forests of Muara Tae are identified as
‘APL’, a designation meaning they are not part of the national forest area and
are open to exploitation. The EIA claim the theft of indigenous forests also
raises serious questions as to what form of ‘development’ these plantations
offer.
In indigenous communities such
as the Dayak Benuaq of Muara Tae, Indonesia has perhaps its most valuable
forest resource. It is due to their sustainable methods, honed over
generations, that the forest even remains.
The remaining forest is home to a
large number of bird species including hornbills, the emblem of Borneo. There
are about 20 species of reptiles and it is also a habitat for both proboscis
monkeys and honey bears.
LINKS
EIA's background information to the
issue, including youtube video www.eia-international.org/villagers-face-off-against-palm-oil-firms-bulldozers
EIA www.eia-international.org
Source: Environmental Investigation Agency via Environment
Times Online
Updated 21.02.2012 Published by: Magne Ove Varsi
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