friends of the earth indonesia /
walhi
jakarta, indonesia, 3 july 2003
Protests against Mining Giants and
Indonesian Government
Hundreds of demonstrators protested today
at the Indonesian House of Representatives in
Jakarta against plans to open up Indonesian
protected areas to mining companies, largely
foreign multinationals.
Parliamentarians were due to make a
decision on this issue today and
demonstrators are urging legislators not to
allow mining in protected areas.
“Besides our increasing numbers in
Jakarta, we are joined by an upsurge of
opposition from regional government and civil
society elements including indigenous
people’s organizations throughout our
archipelago” said in the parliamentary
forecourt Ms Siti Maimunah from the
Indonesian Mining Advocacy Network .
“All of this should be enough to halt the
government’s search for loopholes to avoid
protecting our forests and water catchments
from destructive mining” she added.
The protestors include contingents from
Yogyakarta Province and civil society groups,
academics and lawyers. Several thousand
members of the public also signed postcards
addressed to Indonesian government
representatives expressing their opposition
to mining in protected areas.
-
Mining in protected areas is a
crime, say lawyers
At a press conference held on July 2 in
Jakarta a panel of environmental law experts
and activists declared that Indonesian
government plans to open up protected areas
for mining were illegal.
The Indonesian government has established
a clear ban on open-cut mining in protected
forests through the Forestry Law No.41 of
1999. Regardless of public outcry, the
government is now searching for a loophole,
and is attempting to use section 19 of the
Forestry Law as a legal basis for changing
the status of areas from protected forest to
areas eligible for mining.
Lawyer Ahmad Santosa of the Indonesian
Center for Environmental Law explained that
the process undertaken so far by the
Indonesian government and House of
Repsresentatives had no valid legal basis due
to an absence of necessary government
regulations.
“The House of Representatives as the
legislative body has an obligation to monitor
the executive branch of government, and
ensure compliance with the Forestry Law no.41
of 1999,” stated Ahmad. In his opinion,
threats from mining companies to take
Indonesia to an international arbitration
court over curtailing existing mining leases
is no source for concern, because the
government has the ultimate right to act in
accordance with the public interest.
Moreover, the international community has an
obligation to protect Indonesian forests,
described as “lungs of the world”.
According to Chalid Muhammad of the
Indonesian Mining Advocacy Network, the
government is hell-bent on overturning
protected forest status before the coming
national elections in 2004. “They’re
stubbornly trying to sell off Eastern
Indonesia despite steadfast opposition, for
example the Central Sulawesi government and
House of Representatives have strongly
rejected Rio Tinto and Newcrest’s plans to
mine protected areas” he said. This is
evidence that Jakarta’s portrayal of regional
opinion is not a true representation of their
positions.
- Australian embassy target of mining
protest
Scores of activists from student environment
groups throughout Jakarta joined a coalition
of environmental community groups who
protested yesterday morning (2 July 2003) at
the Australian Embassy in Jakarta. “No to
mining in protected forests!” shouted Ms.
Alien from Friends of the Earth Indonesia /
WALHI. Protest banners and placards featuring
kangaroos and the Australian flag were
paraded in front of the fortified embassy
fence, under the guard of a heavy security
and police contingent.
Speakers addressing the crowd emphasised
the extent of the threat with 11.4 million
hectares of protected areas under mining
leases. “The granting of these mining permits
opens the floodgates for 150 mines to wipe
out our forests and mineral resources” said
M. Ridha Saleh, WALHI’s Deputy Director.
The hour-long action was concluded with a
theatrical performance by student environment
groups, satirizing the sell-off of
Indonesia’s forests to foreign mining
interests. In the performance, the Indonesian
people were represented as forest-based
communities being marginalised and evicted by
the government at the behest of lobbying by
Australian, US and UK embassies.
Student environmentalist Mr Hardani
explained his reasons for co- organizing the
demonstration: “What will happen if we lose
all our protected forests and are only left
with poverty-inducing natural disasters?” he
asked.
For more information please contact in
Indonesia:
Imas Nurhayati,
Friends of the Earth Indonesia / WALHI:
+62-812 859 7435
Igor O’Neill, Mineral Policy Institute:
+62-812 861 2286
Indri, Indonesian Center for Environmental
Law: +62-812 925 9095
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