http://www.smh.com.au/world/jakartas-plan-for-farm-in-jungle-unsettles-papuans-20100402-rjxg.html

Jakarta's plan for farm in jungle unsettles Papuans 
TOM ALLARD 
April 3, 2010 
JAKARTA: The Indonesian government plans to create a vast agricultural estate 
in the restive province of Papua, sparking fears of environmental destruction 
and a return of mass migration policies that have done much to antagonise the 
indigenous population.

Launched last month and already piquing the interest of foreign investors, the 
Merauke Integrated Food and Energy Estate (MIFEE) will initially earmark 1.6 
million hectares of land for development but could expand to 2.5 million 
hectares, or about half the area of Merauke district, in south-east Papua.

The ambitious proposal marks a return to the huge agricultural developments 
promoted by the former dictator Suharto, some of which were spectacular 
failures, such as the 1 million hectare ''mega rice'' project in central 
Kalimantan that devastated peatland forests and did not produce a bushel of 
rice.

But Indonesian officials insist the land around Merauke is suitable for 
agriculture and that the new estate will help the world's fourth most-populous 
nation become self-sufficient in food within five years, and later earn it 
valuable export income.

''Feed Indonesia, then feed the world,'' was the catchcry of the President, 
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, when the plan was announced last month.

Rice, corn, sugar cane, soya bean and palm oil plantations and grazing land for 
livestock are planned for Merauke. The district encompasses tracts of 
rainforest, including swamp forests that are ecologically fragile and which 
contain stores of peat that absorb large amounts of carbon dioxide from the 
atmosphere. The project will require about $6 billion of investment, up to 49 
per cent of it coming from foreign investors.

It is expected to swell the population of Merauke from 175,000 to 800,0000 
people, agricultural ministry officials say. Few of those extra workers are 
expected to be indigenous Papuans, as they are tied to their local areas.

''We have two concerns,'' said Father Decky Ogi, the director of the Justice 
and Peace Secretariat of the Merauke Diocese of the Catholic Church. ''The 
first is ecological and the second is about what happens to the indigenous 
people.''

While Indonesia's Co-ordinating Minister for the Economy, Hatta Rajasa, has 
insisted that scrubland or areas already logged will be converted to farmland, 
a recent study says that assertion is wildly optimistic.

Using satellite images and data from Indonesian government agencies, the firm 
Greenomics has found that more than two-thirds of the land needed for the 
project will have to come from felling virgin forests.

''In total, based on our assessment, there's 500,000 hectares of unforested 
land that can potentially be used in Merauke,'' said Greenomics' executive 
director, Elfian Effendi. ''And those areas are not in one place, they are 
scattered everywhere.

''Foreign investors will not be interested in using small, separated 
landholdings . In any case, if they want to use the maximum area designated for 
the food estate, they will have to cut down 2 million hectares of forest.''

The Indonesian environmental group Wahli warned that large-scale land 
conversion would decimate water catchment areas and ''could result in a faster 
intrusion of sea water to the land''.

Father Ogi said Merauke's ethnically Melanesian indigenous people were anxious 
about the plan. They feared land traditionally used by them would be taken, and 
were apprehensive about a likely influx of workers from other parts of 
Indonesia.

In the early 1970s, the Suharto regime began a massive program of internal 
migration, known as transmigrasi, subsidising people from Java, Sulawesi and 
other regions to move to Papua.

Papua was annexed by Jakarta following a hotly disputed vote of 1025 handpicked 
delegates in 1969 known as the Act of Free Choice. At that time, 96 per cent of 
Papua's residents were Melanesian. At the last census, in 2000, Melanesians 
represented less than 70 per cent of the population, and the proportion is 
widely thought to have continued its decline.

Moreover, the non-indigenous population of Papua dominates formal employment 
and business, creating tensions among the Melanesians and fuelling separatist 
sentiments.

''The transmigrasi policy has been stopped [since 2000] but its impact is still 
going on,'' said Father Ogi. ''Indigenous people are marginalised and there is 
a social gap. It has created a lot of social jealousy. If the MIFEE is 
implemented, I think indigenous people will be more marginalised than they are 
now.''

Even so, the proposed estate has the strong support of the local government and 
the qualified backing of the Governor of Papua, Barnabas Suebu.

Mr Suebu's senior adviser, Agus Sumule, said the scheme should proceed 
gradually, first targeting 150,000 hectares of under-utilised land already 
converted into farmland as part of earlier transmigrasi programs.

Under Papua's special autonomy status, Mr Suebu had a veto over transmigration, 
Dr Sumule said, and the Governor had already vowed to preserve all swamp 
forests.

''The Governor introduced a special bylaw that transferred the unused forest in 
the province to the communal ownership of the people,'' said Dr Sumule. ''You 
can't just go and transfer the ownership of it, like under the New Order [the 
era of Suharto].''

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