JAKARTA (JP): State Minister for the Environment Nabiel
Makarim vows to fight to place environmental issues within
the mainstream of the government's policies.
Speaking in a discussion on environmental problems here
on Thursday night, he said that cooperation from related
ministries was crucial to achieve the goal. It is also
very critical in the effort to materialize the idea of
sustainable development in the country, he added.
He said that environmental problems were not only the
responsibility of his office but must also become the
concern of other ministries.
"We know how bad is the condition of our
environment. But I need cooperation from related
ministries, environment activists and experts to determine
what to do next. This is a struggle, but it cannot wait
long.
"Unless strategic measures are taken in the next
few years, our environment will be ruined. If any of you
have any suggestions, I would like to hear them because
I'm now an ear," he said.
The discussion, held by environmental activists and
attended by members of the House of Representatives'
Commission VIII dealing with, among other things, the
environment, was aimed at gathering input for the newly
installed minister.
Legislator Tubagus Haryono asserted that the government
must shift the paradigm from considering the environment
as one of the state's resources into making it the state's
assets so as to stop the excessive exploitation of the
environment.
He said that the government would soon submit a bill on
resources management to the House. The bill is expected to
strictly limit the use of the natural resources.
"There is a lot of overlapping in the existing
laws on the management of natural resources, so there
should be a higher law to overcome the problems," he
added.
The weak law enforcement and the lack of legal power of
the Environmental Impact Control Agency (Bapedal), which
is chaired by a state minister, were also raised during
the discussion.
Environmental activists urged Nabiel to uphold the law
so the government can send a strong message to the
perpetrators blamed for pollution, forest fires and
illegal logging, concerns that have come to the forefront
of national issues.
Mas Achmad Santosa, director of the Indonesian Center
for Environmental Law (ICEL), pushed Nabiel not to merely
handle violations case by case or to leave it to the law
enforcement institutions, but to draw up an action plan to
curb violations of environmental regulations.
Sandra Moniaga from Law and Society (HuMa) suggested
that Nabiel correct the current situation where the
resources management is mainly held by industries and
foreign investors, by changing it into community-based
resource management.
Separately on Tuesday, Nabiel's predecessor Emil Salim
reminded the participants of the upcoming deadline for
Indonesia to prove its commitment to the Consultative
Group on Indonesia (CGI) last year on stopping forest
fires and illegal logging.
"It's Nabiel's duty as minister to uphold the law
and bring environmental issues to the center of the
government's policy since environmental issues actually
cut across several sectors," he told journalists. (bby)