Matthew Linkie and Patricia Sibarani,
Contributor, Kerinci Seblat
Arson attacks on Government vehicles, three Government
officials severely beaten up, and nine kidnapped from a
public bus. These are not the war-torn regions in
Afghanistan. These are the risks involved with protecting
one of the last refuges for elephants, tigers and rhinos
from illegal logging in Indonesia.
Indonesia contains about 50 percent of the forests in
Asia and with it a bewildering array of animals and plants
that occur nowhere else in the World. On the island of
Sumatra alone you can find the world's tallest flower, Amorphophallus
titanum, or the world's largest flower, Rafflesia
arnoldi, or the last remaining tigers in Indonesia.
Unfortunately, despite being able to boast these
natural wonders, Sumatra is better known for the imminent
demise of its forest. This places of great importance on a
large protected area such as the 13,300 square kilometer
Kerinci Seblat National Park (KSNP), in west-central
Sumatra. Yet, the driving forces behind deforestation,
rampant illegal logging, know no bounds. This fact was
well illustrated in the district of Merangin, Jambi
province, which borders KSNP.
Until recently, rife corruption and mob rule combined
to make illegal logging an impenetrable process. Previous
attempts to stop this activity, such as using forest
police, in addition to local police and the military
failed due to an intricate web of complicity.
The unruly loggers could quickly rouse large support to
aid in their intimidation and then submission of those
trying to interrupt their work.
In September 2001, about 100 villagers stopped a public
bus and took nine KSNP staff hostage. Their demand: the
release of an illegal logger who was arrested earlier in
the afternoon. By night-time he was free. Such a display
of lawlessness led many people to regard Merangin as a
lost cause for wildlife conservation. Fortunately the head
of Merangin district did not share these sentiments.
Rotani Yutaka, district head since 2000, knew that the
logging of forested water catchment in his province was
responsible for floods that damaged crops, soil erosion
that polluted river water used for cooking, cleaning and
washing, and landslides that destroyed important trade
roads. Yutaka knew that tough action was necessary if the
forest and its services were to be safeguarded for future
generations.
With this insight, Yutaka took the initiative to recall
military officers who were fighting against the
independence movement in Bandar Aceh, North Sumatra.
A team of 11 were deployed in the most problematic area
of Merangin with a mandate to spot-check every truck
passing through and impound all illegal timber. The
results were astonishing: from July 5 to July 19, 195 logs
(46 cubic meters) and 1,110 pieces of sawn timber (24
cubic meters), were confiscated.
Even the loggers admitted that they could no longer
work in this area. They sought to articulate their
opposition by throwing stones at the regent's offices.
Yet, the courage of Yutaka's staff, reinforced by
disciplined, fit and well-equipped military teams
(experienced in conflict situations), proved an effective
tonic to this usually triumphant bullying mentality.
Fundamental for the success in Merangin was a political
will matched by sufficient resources, transparency and
controlled aggression.
The military team targeted the most active illegal
logging area and intercepted the supply route. This was
not difficult because logging trucks only use one main
road for transporting timber to sawmills or shipping ports
for export.
The teams confiscated all roadside timber awaiting
collection. The wood confiscated is stored at police or
national park headquarters. There it is measured and
documented. These figures need to be published in district
and provincial government reports so their status can be
checked.
The military team members are independent of the
illegal logging network and therefore less susceptible to
bribes. Their bosses are not. They depend on this extra
income to maintain a comfortable lifestyle. So this team
will need a watchdog to check they are law-abiding and
that they do not become complacent. This process would be
assisted by rotating the team members every two months and
by the addition of another team operating in another
problem area.
As the rich variety of animals and plants in tropical
forests continues to diminish preventative measures are
urgently required. The recent United Nation's World Summit
on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg attempted to
provide these but failed. The reason: lack of political
will.
The results from Merangin are therefore even more
encouraging because they provide a model that could be
replicated elsewhere in Indonesia as part of the countries
own initiative to successfully tackle what the World
Summit did not.