http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2018/05/04/indonesias-regional-elections-take-toll-on-environment.html
Indonesia's regional elections take toll on environment

   -

   Moses Ompusunggu

   The Jakarta Post

Jakarta | Fri, May 4, 2018 | 10:53 am

[image: Indonesia's regional elections take toll on environment] While
political parties flex their muscles ahead of the simultaneous regional
elections scheduled for June, in which 171 regions across Indonesia will
elect their new leaders, the period is likely to be used by businessmen to
deepen their ties to political hopefuls in the regions to support their
business expansion through obtaining permits, environment groups have
warned. (Shutterstock/Rich Carey)

Testimony by a palm-oil businessman in a bribery trial at the Jakarta
Corruption Court has revealed how local elections have done more harm than
good to the environment.

The court heard on Wednesday that Rita Widyasari, the suspended regent of
Kutai Kartanegara in East Kalimantan, allegedly financed her political
activities with billions of rupiah that she received from the businessman,
who allegedly wanted to secure concession permits in a protected peatland
area in the former's regency.

Businessman Hery Susanto Gun, who is also being charged in the case,
testified on Wednesday that Rita had demanded Rp 9 billion (US$643,950)
when she was running for office.

Hery, president director of oil palm firm PT Sawit Golden Prima, told the
court that the demand was conveyed by Rita's aide Hani Kristiyanto.

Rita did visit Hery afterward, but did not ask for the money, merely asking
for advice on "winning the local election", Hery said.

When Rita was elected Kutai Kertanegara regent, Hery told the court that
the politician, again through Rani, asked for Rp 6 billion because Rita had
run out of money after the election.

According to Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) prosecutors, the Rp 6
billion was a bribe given by Hery to Rita relating to Hery's efforts to
obtain a business permit for the former's 16,000-hectare oil palm
concession in the regency.

After Hery gave the money to Rita, the latter finally signed the permit
document for Hery's oil palm plantation, even though a local regulation
prohibits agricultural companies from having concessions of over 15,000 ha.

[image: Kutai Kartanegara (Kukar) regent Rita Widyasari]Kutai Kartanegara
(Kukar) regent Rita Widyasari (Antara/Sigid Kurniawan)

Furthermore, according to local activists, the oil palm plantation is
located within a peat swamp ecosystem, which plays a major role for the
environment by cycling and storing significant amounts of carbon. A
substantial proportion of Indonesia's peatlands, including in East
Kalimantan, has suffered severe degradation to make way for industrial
logging concessions and oil palm plantations.

Agricultural business in Indonesia, which contains one of the world’s three
largest stands of tropical forest, along with the Amazon and Congo basins,
rapidly expanded during the 32-year regime of former president Soeharto,
which benefited a small group of forestry conglomerates with close links to
the strongman president after it created the Forestry Law in 1967, which
gave Jakarta the exclusive right to forest exploitation in roughly 143
million ha of the country's forests.

The fall of Soeharto in 1998 marked the birth of the regional autonomy
system, which gave local forest agencies control over much of the forest
estate, and the direct regional elections to generate a new breed of local
leaders.

While political parties flex their muscles ahead of the simultaneous
regional elections scheduled for June, in which 171 regions across
Indonesia will elect their new leaders, the period is likely to be used by
businessmen to deepen their ties to political hopefuls in the regions to
support their business expansion through obtaining permits, environment
groups have warned.

In a report released in January, the Indonesian Forum for Environment
(Walhi) predicted 2018 would be a tough year for the environment, with
corporations "hoping to secure their own interests through political
intervention."

Walhi said that in the past business permits had been rampantly issued by
local leaders before or soon after elections through various means, such as
by revising local spatial documents, which detail land use in various areas..

"Regional elections always provide room for a strong association between
business magnates and political leaders," Walhi said in its report.

The practice may flourish again in 2018, because the public's attention is
solely focused on provinces that could be battlegrounds for political
parties to secure their interests, not regions that are prone to
environmental degradation and land conflicts, said Walhi executive director
Nur Hidayati.

[image: An election officer moves a ballot box from the Ciamis Regional
Elections (Pilkada) logistics warehouse in Ciamis regency, West Java, on
Feb.28.]An election officer moves a ballot box from the Ciamis Regional
Elections (Pilkada) logistics warehouse in Ciamis regency, West Java, on
Feb.28. (Antara/Adeng Bustomi)

It is not only agricultural firms that are eyeing permits before or after
regional elections, but also mining companies.

Merah Johansyah, national coordinator of the Mining Advocacy Network
(Jatam), said there were at least 13 regions participating in the
simultaneous local elections that were prone to mining permit transactions
in the midst of elections.

"They are regions with a high number of conflicts relating to mining
operations based on Jatam's data," said Merah.

The regions are 11 provinces – Bengkulu, Central Java, East Java, East
Kalimantan, East Nusa Tenggara (NTT), Jambi, Papua, Riau, Southeast
Sulawesi, South Sumatra and West Java,  -- and two regencies -- Dairi in
North Sumatra and East Manggarai in NTT.

Issuing extractive business permits is one of five moves in the corruption
playbook widely used by regional leaders in Indonesia, according to
Indonesia Corruption Watch (ICW), along with misusing village funds,
disbursing social funds, promotion for civil servants and misusing
authority in goods and services procurement.

Another important element that could decide the future of the environment
is whether candidate pairs competing in regional elections see environment
protection as a primary concern during their campaigns.

But a substantial discourse on environmental protection is one that is
somewhat missing in Indonesia's regional elections, said Hendri Sitorus, a
North Sumatra University environmental sociologist.

"Regional election campaigns have not been sensitive to environment issues.”

Kirim email ke