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| World asked to help
save Indonesia's coral reefs
National News - October 26, 2000
NUSA DUA, Bali (JP): Vice President Megawati Soekarnoputri
called on the international community on Wednesday to help save
the nation's coral reefs through concrete but nonbinding
assistance.
"Paying close attention to international developments
lately, particularly with regard to the increasing tendency for
politicking among international organizations, I fervently hope
that the International Societies for Reef Studies (ISRS) will
stick to their professional areas ofcompetence," Megawati
said in her address to some 1,500 of the world's marine
scientists and other guests at the ninth International Symposium
on Coral Reefs here.
Megawati said that although the country's maritime area of
some 5.8 million square kilometers is home to around 65,000
square kilometers of coral reefs, or one-eighth of all the
world's coral reefs, only about 6.5 percent of them are still in
good condition while the rest have been damaged.
"Of course, we are responsible for this. But I do hope
that we can arrange cooperation to cope with the problem.
"I said "cooperation" rather than
"aid" as the connotations and mechanisms of the latter
have been altered," she asserted.
Megawati further noted that concrete measures and responses
to the problems of coral reefs are far more important than new
regulations or norms.
"Cooperation in the form of joint research,
dissemination of knowledge and expertise, exchange of
experiences, and the provision of guidance and assistance for
experts implementing particular programs will provide a concrete
solution to the problem," she said.
Megawati also urged members of international coral reef
societies to ensure that the symposium will not rest with the
formulation of recommendations alone.
"This meeting should substantively come up with new
techniques and methods for rehabilitating coral reefs and
effectively sharing these with interested and related
parties," she said.
"The last three years have been difficult for us,
especially with the impact of the economic crisis and the fact
that we have simultaneously had to resolve various social and
political upheavals in certain regions that have led to a great
deal of material and human losses and threats to our nation's
unity.
"This crisis has also hit the environmental management
sector and we willhave to quickly remedy this."
Earlier on the second day of the symposium, a Global Report
on the Statusof Coral Reefs was made public.
Predictions had been made in 1992 that over the subsequent 10
to 20 yearsanother 30 percent of the world's coral reefs could
be effectively destroyed if urgent management actions were not
implemented.
Sea erosion
Separately, an investigator from the Environmental Impact
Management Agency (Bapedal), R. Bambang Pramudyanto, revealed
that the destruction of coral reefs had led to massive sea
erosion, such as was happening along thenorth coast of Java.
"Other contributing factors to sea erosion are the
drastic destruction ofmangrove forest as well as reclamation and
river course realignment, all ofwhich alter sea current
patterns."
Bambang further noted the alarming fact that some 2,140
hectares of beachhad been severely eroded in Indramayu, West
Java.
"Tegal (in Central Java) has lost some 125 hectares of
its beaches due toerosion while in Semarang (the province's
capital), some 200 hectares of beach have been eroded,"
Bambang said.
State-owned oil company Pertamina has been forced to relocate
its refinery pipes several times in these areas due to sea
erosion.
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