Indonesian hearings reveal forest
ravages
Five months of hearings culminate in
recommendations for Jokowi As Indonesia’s national inquiry into
land conflicts affecting indigenous peoples draws to a close, it has
become clear that police brutality has become a serial feature, that
legions of companies are operating without permits and that the
government hasn’t even catalogued the myriad indigenous peoples who
live in the forest. Five months of hearings by community leaders,
bureaucrats, businesspeople and security personnel from every corner
of the archipelago have finished, with the commissioners writing up
their final recommendations, to be released this month as a policy
document for President Joko Widodo.
That presents Jokowi, as he is known,
with one of his biggest challenges, betting into vastly monied timber
interests that have a major interest in continuing to clear forest
and plant oil palm, and which have found a willing ally in the
notoriously corrupt Environment and Forestry Ministry. The World
Wildlife Fund estimates that as much as 40 to 60 percent of
Indonesia’s timber is exported illegally, principally to Japan and
China, costing the government as much as US$3 billion a year. The
hearings have produced a litany of abuses.
Yet while many feature prominently in
the dialogue surrounding land grabbing and indigenous peoples,
another major theme has been less talked about: the use of “divide
and conquer” as a strategy for separating communities from the
rights to their territory, some say as a matter of course. “It was
prominent in all the cases,” Rukka Sombolinggi, international
advocacy coordinator of the Indigenous Peoples Alliance of the
Archipelago (AMAN), said after the hearing in Kalimantan, one of
eight held across the country. “Whether it is government, company
or police, the main approach they always use is creating internal
conflicts, and then taking advantage of that. It is their most
powerful weapon.” The inquiry’s commissioners noticed it too.
Asked about the phenomenon, Sandra Moniaga of the National Human
Rights Commission (Komnas HAM) rattled off a series of examples from
around Indonesia.
All too often, she said, proponents of
development projects try to “capitalize on differences within the
community” instead of seeking a true consensus, as is the
decisionmaking norm for indigenous groups that tend to operate
collectively, with some form of communal ownership, rather than on a
typically capitalist or individual basis. “Divisions are natural;
people have different opinions,” Sandra said. “But what is
worrying is that [companies and officials] are utilizing those
differences for their own interests. And that creates tension within
communities.” Tactics vary with some companies handing out jobs,
cash or other spoils to win some people over while leaving others out
in the cold. A common practice is to initiate contact by hiring a few
residents to convince the others. Politicians lend a hand by
maneuvering their cronies into key posts at the village and
subdistrict levels. Judicial processes can also be manipulated. What
it all amounts to is foisting an unfamiliar model of land acquisition
on communities that have always played by different rules, often by
tempting or empowering some of their number to usurp the old ways,
and calling in the security forces when the others resist.
The stakes are high: Indonesia is home
to tens of millions of indigenous peoples, by AMAN’s count, and
last year the government recorded 8,000 land conflicts. Most of those
citizens and conflicts reside and exist in the some 65 percent of the
country designated as forest area, which is overseen by the
Environment and Forestry Ministry. These days, the ministry is facing
perhaps the greatest challenge to its power yet, with a variety of
new developments threatening to reduce its control over the forest
zone and its authority to greenlight certain industrial activities.
The lack of follow-up on one of these developments, last year’s
landmark Constitutional Court ruling that took indigenous peoples’
customary forests out of state forests, prompted Komnas HAM’s
inquiry, which concentrates on the forest zone.
Just one more illustration of how capitalism works all around the world. Divide and conquer - which is assisted to a large degree by lack of information or deliberate misinformation as in the mushroom syndrome: keep them in the dark and feed them s**t.
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