Indonesia to Investigate Forest Concession
Good
morning , I'm Ardina devinta and this is the headline news Indonesia to
Investigate Forest Concession.
The
Environment Ministry has said it will launch an investigation into the issuance
of a plantation concession inside the Tripa peat swamp forest in Aceh province.
The ministry’s announcement came in response to findings by the Reducing
Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation forest carbon reduction
task force.
On
Friday, the government-formed task force said it had evidence that palm oil
company Kallista Alam had violated regulations in turning the swamp forest into
a plantation. The task force recommended that the Environment Ministry and the
police further scrutinize Kallista’s actions. Sudariyono, the ministry’s head
of law enforcement unit, said at a seminar in Jakarta on Monday they will
investigate if the company has properly conducted an Amdal [environmental
impact analysis] or has other environmental permits. Even if the company did
have a permit, Sudariyono said, the ministry would look into whether it
included right to operate inside the Tripa peat forest. Kuntoro Mangkusubroto,
the head of the REDD task force, said on Friday that Kallista had violated the
regulation.
He
said Opening a plantation inside a protected swamp area has clearly broken the
law,. After interviewing locals, the team was convinced that Kallista had used
illegal slash-and-burn methods in order to clear the peat land, violating
several laws on plantations and the environment. Kuntoro said Based on
eyewitness accounts, the burning has been systematically done. On April 3, an
Aceh court threw out a lawsuit brought by a coalition of environmental groups
against outgoing Aceh Governor Irwandi Yusuf, who they alleged issued Kallista
an illegal permit in August 2011.
The
license allows the company to convert 1,600 hectares of the Tripa peat swamp
forest into a palm oil plantation. The forest was initially included in the
government’s map of areas off-limits to forestry activities, published in May
2011, as part of a two-year moratorium on new forestry concessions in peat and
primary forests. However, a revised map issued in November dropped the Tripa
forest from the protected zone. The plaintiffs in the suit argued that when
Irwandi issued the permit in August, the revised map had not yet been
published, meaning the area was still protected and the issuance was illegal.
The
Banda Aceh State Administrative Court dismissed the groups’ lawsuit on a
technicality, claiming that it was “not authorized to hear the matter.” The
coalition, which includes Indonesia’s largest environmental group Walhi and
Greenpeace, said on Thursday that it had filed an appeal against the court’s
decision. Deddy Ratih, Walhi’s forest campaigner, said his group had filed an
appeal with a higher court in the province. Deddy said The area is critical to
the conservation of rare species including orangutans, many of whom have died
because of continuing fires there.
He
said satellite images showed more than 40 hot spots indicating fires in March
as a result of land conversion in Tripa, located in northern Sumatra. There
were some 2,000 to 3,000 orangutans in the area in the 1990s, but Ratih said only
a few hundred are left today.
There
are currently about 6,600 Sumatran orangutans in the wild. Kuntoro, the REDD
task force chief, is a close aide to President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono. he
said That plantation is inside the protected forest. It’s strange they can get
a permit. He suspect something behind the issue of the permit.
And
that concludes our broadcast for this morning, good morning from ardan TV news.
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