Wednesday,
April 24, 2002
The Jakarta Post, Jakarta
Jambi Governor Zulkiffli Nurdin has hit out at rife
illegal logging in the Kerinci Seblat National Reserve,
home to large numbers of rare species of flora and fauna.
"Many reports have reached me that almost every
night, some 30 logging trucks transport logs out of the
protected reserve," he said when opening a bridge
project in Muaro Madrasah Village, Jangkat Regency, Jambi
on Tuesday.
He called on the provincial police and local military
to immediately take stern action to stop the logging.
The national reserve, covering 1.48 million hectares in
Jambi, South Sumatra, Bengkulu and West Sumatra, contains
millions of hectares of virgin rainforest, rare and
protected species such as elephants, rhinoceros, tapirs,
tigers, sun bears and clouded leopards.
Besides the wild animals and the beautiful scenery,
which includes Lake Kerinci and Mount Kerinci, the park
has many rare botanical species.
A number of international institutions and foundations
have donated resources to help the government manage the
reserve.
Zulkiffli reiterated that the four provinces had long
agreed to enhance cooperation to preserve the park.
"The local forestry offices and security
authorities in the four provinces must take strict action
against all sides who are involved in the illegal
logging," he said.
He warned that donor countries could stop their
donations if the environmental deterioration at the park
continued.
He called on security authorities to crack down on the
mushrooming sawmills operating near the national park
which were believed to process logs looted from the
protected forest.
"The presence of sawmills near the national park
is an indication that they get their raw materials from
the park," he said.
The Jambi Provincial Police have confiscated hundreds
of cubic meters of illegal logs from a number of sawmills
while the owners have been arrested for further
investigation.