-
Indonesia: New report on the human rights
impacts of oil palm plantation expansion
The major issue of
land tenure underlies the problem of oil palm schemes in Indonesia
and elsewhere. Occupying large tracts of community land where
food and cash crops used to be grown and medicines and building
materials were harvested, monoculture oil palm plantations erode
the rights and livelihoods of local communities.
Through promises,
bribes, and cheating combined with the unawareness of local communities
of their rights, companies move in leading to the large-scale
privatisation of land and natural resources.
Palm oil, a vegetable
oil already used extensively for food production, cosmetics and
animal feed, is increasingly in demand as an agrofuel. In response
to this growing market, large-scale oil palm plantations are being
developed in Latin America, West Africa and South East Asia. Indonesia,
the world’s largest producer of crude palm oil, has already increased
its palm estates to 7.3 million hectares, and is planning to expand
the area under plantation by a further 20 million hectares – an
area the size of England, the Netherlands and Switzerland combined.
The recent report
“Losing Ground. The human rights impacts of oil palm plantation
expansion in Indonesia”
[http://www.wrm.org.uy/countries/Indonesia/losingground.pdf]
by Friends of the Earth, LifeMosaic and Sawit Watch, reveals how
Indonesian government policies and palm oil industry practices
are harming the rights of local communities and indigenous peoples
and argues that in the face of such evidence targets to increase
agrofuel use in the United Kingdom and the rest of the European
Union are misguided, risking environmental damage and human rights
abuses on an even bigger scale.