Indonesia:
The forest assaulted by the forestry industry
Indonesia has the world’s third largest
area of tropical forest, after Brazil and the Democratic Republic
of Congo. Although only 1.3 per cent of the world’s total forest
area, Indonesia’s forests are home to 10 per cent of the world’s
flora species, 12 per cent of the world’s mammals, 17 per cent
of the world’s reptiles and amphibians, and 17 per cent of the
world’s birds. Indonesia is the second country in the world in
terms of wildlife richness. Indonesia’s forests are also home
to endangered species such as orangutan, tigers, rhinos and Asian
elephants.
Forests are the second largest contributor
to the Indonesian national economy after oil. The State used revenue
from the forests to maintain its power during the 32 year New
Order regime under the former President Suharto. Forestry operations
– in the form of forest concessions (Hak Pengusahaan Hutan – HPHs),
industrial tree plantations (Hutan Tanaman Industri – HTIs) and
other plantations (such as oil palm and rubber) – were distributed
among the ruler’s families, friends and partners, among key military
officers and political elites as a reward for their loyalty. Those
who controlled the forests had considerable wealth and power.
For forest-dependent village communities,
forests have a completely different meaning. Abusive and destructive
forest management has stripped forests and has greatly affected
the rural poor. For these people, forests embrace cultural values.
Most rural communities living outside the densely-populated islands
of Java, Bali and Madura practice a combination of subsistence
and commercial agriculture with gogo rice (upland, unirrigated
rice), other annual crops and tree crops. They also collect various
forest products, such as rattan, honey, resins, herbs, fruits,
fish and wildlife, for both commercial and domestic purposes.
About seven million people in Sumatra and Kalimantan rely for
their livelihoods on their rubber gardens, which cover a total
area of about 2.5 million hectares. In Sumatra, local communities
manage about four million hectares of forest using various agroforestry
practices which combine natural forest management and fruit gardens,
without external aid.
Forest communities have a profound understanding
of traditional forest management, which they inherited from their
ancestors. This traditional forest management has been specifically
acknowledged in the 1945 National Constitution.
As most forest peoples have no written
or official certificates of ownership, the state under President
Suharto ignored indigenous rights and exercised control over Indonesia’s
vast, profitable forest lands. Suharto’s “New Order” regime included
a development agenda which was driven by logging the country’s
forests. The state claimed more than 90 per cent of the total
forest land outside Java. This so-called “state forest” was designated
without either due process or proper compensation for local communities.
Mature forests which had been managed sustainably by indigenous
communities for generations and which were rich in flora and fauna,
were exploited for timber and converted into vast plantations
of monocultures of exotic fast-growing trees.
The rapid expansion and development
of wood processing industries exceeded the supply capacity of
production forest areas and the plantations. As a result, the
loggers expanded ever deeper into natural forests, logging in
protected areas as well as state forest still claimed by indigenous
communities. The World Bank, which has more recently produced
critiques of illegal logging driven by the over-development of
the pulp industry, is itself partly responsible for the problem.
In the 1980s, the World Bank was one of the agencies involved
in promoting the expansion of the pulp and paper industry. In
1984, for example, the World Bank financed a study, carried out
by Finnish forestry consulting firm Jaakko Pöyry, aimed at “strengthening
the structure of the Indonesian pulp and paper industry”.
A research from the Indonesian NGO WALHI
indicates that at least 72 per cent of the country’s forests have
been destroyed. In a press release in 2004, WALHI pointed out
that the deforestation rate in Indonesia had reached 3.8 million
hectares annually, the highest rate of forest loss in the world.
To put this rate of forest destruction into perspective, this
means that an area of forest equivalent to six football pitches
is destroyed in Indonesia every minute. Based on this calculation,
every minute the Government of Indonesia loses US$1,300 in unpaid
tax and customs (three times the average annual income of an Indonesian
family), while a few conglomerates and elite business people pocket
US$24,000 from the theft of Indonesia’s forests.
The impacts of this rapid deforestation
have been widespread and various. Impacts on the environment include
the loss of unique biodiversity, increasing occurrence of floods
and drought, decreasing water quality and quantity, and increasing
occurrence of forest fires that pollute the air and contribute
to global climate change.
Although more and more people have become
aware of the environmental impacts, they know little about and
rarely discuss the impacts of illegal logging on human rights.
The over-capacity of the wood processing industry and the inability
of industrial tree plantations to supply the demands of this industry
have driven the destructive exploitation of Indonesia’s forests,
both legal and illegal. As in other sectors that are illicitly
profitable, criminal networks play an important role as blackmailers
and protectors of illegal operations, which unhesitatingly use
violence to put down opposition to their operations. In Indonesia,
the illegal sector and the use of violence are often linked to
governmental officials.
Ironically, deforestation and the loss
of local communities’ livelihoods are driven by government policies
which the government claimed were designed to bring prosperity
to the nation. Suharto’s development concept, like the one adopted
by many emerging industrialised countries, was to accelerate the
expansion of the economy through natural resource exploitation.
However, the goal of expansion of the economy became less important
and was eventually, replaced by Suharto’s agenda to consolidate
his power through political patronage, where he handed out permits
for exploitation of natural resources. More than 62 million hectares
of forest land were awarded as forestry concessions (HPHs), without
a proper tendering process, to tycoons and state-owned forestry
companies that had family ties to Suharto’s family, or ties to
the military. Although Suharto fell in 1998, the nation still
lives with his regime’s legacy of bad forestry governance and
law enforcement.
Excerpted and adapted from “Social conflict
and environmental disaster: A report on Asia Pulp and Paper’s
operations in Sumatra, Indonesia”, by Rivani Noor and Rully
Syumanda, August 2006,
http://www.wrm.org.uy/countries/Indonesia/Book8.pdf