*Agaknya konco bin sahabat dapat tanah luas dibalik sertifikat tanah untuk
kaum tani.  Monggo Monggo, ayo terus buka jalan di rimba Papua agar kelapa
sawit bisa tumbuh dan rakyat bisa lebih mudah melancong hilir mudik.
hehehehehehe*


https://news.mongabay.com/2018/12/vast-palm-oil-project-in-papua-must-be-investigated-by-government-watchdogs-say/
Vast palm oil project in Papua must be investigated by government,
watchdogs say

by Philip Jacobson <https://news.mongabay.com/by/philip-jacobson/> on 6
December 2018

   -

   *Last week, Mongabay, Tempo, Malaysiakini and Earthsight’s The Gecko
   Project published an investigation into the story behind the Tanah Merah
   project, an enormous palm oil development in Papua, Indonesia, whose owners
   remain shrouded in secrecy.*
   -

   *Observers say what while Papuans have a right to development, the Tanah
   Merah project is clearly intended to benefit the wealthy and connected
   individuals who have coalesced around it.*
   -

   *Watchdog groups want Indonesian President Joko Widodo’s administration
   to investigate the permits underpinning the project with an eye toward
   cancelling them. They have also called on authorities to implement a new
   regulation requiring companies to disclose their beneficial owners.*

The Indonesian government must put an immediate halt to land clearing in
the Tanah Merah project, a vast stretch of land earmarked to become the
world’s biggest oil palm plantation, environmental advocates and anti-graft
watchdogs say.

Spanning 2,800 square kilometers (1,100 square miles), nearly five times
the size of Chicago, the land sits at the heart of one of the world’s last
great tracts of unbroken rainforest, on the giant island of New Guinea.

Only 2 percent of the land has been cleared, but if the entire project area
is cleared as planned, it will release as much carbon as Virginia does
annually by burning fossil fuels.

Well-placed observers argue the project is clearly intended to benefit the
cabal of wealthy and connected individuals who have coalesced around it,
and will fail to deliver development to the indigenous Papuans living in
its shadow. They are calling on Indonesian authorities to cancel the
licenses underpinning the project, or subject them to special scrutiny as
part of an ongoing review of existing permits.

The Tanah Merah project was the subject of a joint investigation published
last week by Mongabay, The Gecko Project, Tempo and Malaysiakini
<https://news.mongabay.com/2018/11/the-secret-deal-to-destroy-paradise/>.
The article revealed how the ownership of the project has been concealed by
a maze of shell companies, front shareholders, fake addresses and offshore
secrecy jurisdictions, making it impossible to tell who will benefit from
the destruction of the rainforest in Boven Digoel district, Papua province.

Even local government officials are in the dark about who is behind the
project, greenlit during a chaotic period in the district. Some of the
permits for the project were issued by a politician who was in jail at the
time on unrelated charges of corruption, for which he was later convicted.

“The forests of Boven Digoel are immensely important to the indigenous
people[s] of New Guinea, whose culture and livelihoods depend on the
bushmeat, sago and fruits the forests provide and its clean flowing
rivers,” Gemma Tillack, forest policy director at the Rainforest Action
Network (RAN), wrote in an email. “The region is also a global biodiversity
hotspot with species found nowhere else on Earth.”

She called the Tanah Merah project a “scandal” that “reveals how
Indonesia’s rainforests and communities are being sacrificed for the greed
of overseas investors and corrupt politicians, pretending to be promoting
development.”

Oil palms on the edge of the Tanah Merah project. Image by Nanang Sujana
for The Gecko Project.

Indonesia is the world’s top producer of palm oil, an edible oil found in
countless consumer products as well as biofuels. At the same time, the
country has lost more tropical forest since the turn of the century than
any nation but Brazil, largely a result of unbridled plantation expansion.
This deforestation has catapulted Indonesia up the ranks of the world’s top
greenhouse gas-emitting countries and put it on the front lines of the
global extinction crisis.

“Far too often these problems are treated as though they are caused by a
group of rogue individuals on the ground,” said Eleanor Nichol, campaign
leader at Global Witness, an international NGO that campaigns against
corporate secrecy.

“The reality … includes a handful of incredibly powerful and well-resourced
multinational companies and elite businesspeople, who hide their identities
behind anonymous companies incorporated in secrecy jurisdictions like the
Cayman Islands and Singapore. This anonymity allows these people to finance
wide-scale destruction of climate-critical rainforests without scrutiny or
consequence.”

The identities of some of the investors behind the Tanah Merah project have
come to light. Malaysian logging firms Shin Yang and Rimbunan Hijau have
stakes in the project. Shin Yang is a major shareholder in the sawmill
under construction, and Rimbunan Hijau is a minor shareholder in a company
with land for a plantation.

Another shareholder is Chairul Anhar, secretary general of the
Indonesia-Malaysia Business Council. And another is Desi Noferita, whose
brother, Edi Yosfi, is known as a powerbroker in the National Mandate
Party, or PAN, an influential Indonesian political party.

The billionaire Saeed Anam family of Yemen has also been linked to the
project, although representatives of the family’s conglomerate, the Hayel
Saeed Anam Group, deny involvement.

Most of the companies with land for a plantation in the project are owned
by holding companies registered to secrecy jurisdictions in the Middle East
or Singapore, making it impossible for observers to identity the true
shareholders.

“We need to call time on anonymous companies,” Nichol said. “This year the
UK demanded its Overseas Territories open up, and all EU member states are
about to introduce public registers of the real owners of anonymous
companies, so they won’t be anonymous anymore. The rest of the world needs
to follow suit.”

Children fishing in Meto village, Boven Digoel. Image by Nanang Sujana for
The Gecko Project.

In March, Indonesian President Joko Widodo issued a regulation giving
companies one year to disclose the identities of their “beneficial owners”
to the government, although in a young democracy like Indonesia it is not a
given that such a regulation will be enforced.

“This case is a clear example of why enforcement of the new regulations on
beneficial ownership is so important, to ensure that whoever is behind a
project like this is held to account,” said Arie Rompas, a forest
campaigner with Greenpeace Indonesia. “If the license review process
promised by Jokowi’s government through the palm oil moratorium is to be
credible, concessions such as these must be revoked.”

In September this year, President Jokowi, as he is popularly known,
declared a freeze on the issuance of new permits for palm plantations and
ordered a review of all existing permits. Phil Aikman, campaign director
for Southeast Asia at Mighty Earth, called the Tanah Merah project a “case
in point” of why the moratorium on new permits “didn’t go far enough.”

“The moratorium should also have applied to rainforest and peatland areas
in existing concessions, such as those held by shady shell companies in the
Boven Digoel district in Papua,” he said.

Permits issued for palm plantations across Papua, including in Boven
Digoel, are marked by “many irregularities” and a “lack of transparency,”
said Mufti Ode, of Forest Watch Indonesia.

“The impact is that many companies have emerged who only want to seize
natural resources without regard to environmental conditions and the rights
of indigenous peoples,” he said. “Companies proven to have violated the
licensing process and who fail to recognize the existence and rights of the
people must [have their licenses] revoked.”

Eric Wakker, co-founder of sustainability consultancy Aidenvironment,
called for the Indonesian government to issue a stop-work order on
development within the project and to review the permits underpinning it.

“Given its history, to me it is clear that this Tanah Merah problem is the
governments’ of Malaysia and Indonesia to sort out, which minimally begins
with a stop work order and subsequent transparent review of the issued
permits,” he said. “The current governments are in power because people
voted for clean development, so that means they must be seen to undo
previous governments’ mistakes as well.”

He said he hoped Indonesia’s anti-corruption commission, the KPK, would
take a look at the Tanah Merah project, and even work with Malaysia’s
anti-graft agency, the MACC, which is “now much more free to operate than
previously” following the ouster of former Prime Minister Najib Razak’s
government earlier this year.

“Of course, this is not to deny Papuans the right to development but this
[Tanah Merah] project isn’t the way to deliver that to them,” Wakker said.

Moses Wine returns from hunting in the forest in Meto. Image by Nanang
Sujana for The Gecko Project.

Tillack, of RAN, called on “any banks, investors or consumer good
manufacturing companies connected to actors behind the Tanah Merah project”
to “immediately cut ties” with them. She pointed out that Unilever and
Nestlé, two of the biggest palm oil users, had already stopped buying from
the Hayel Saeed Anam Group.

“As the world’s leaders unite in Poland to solve the climate crisis, we
must call on political leaders to do what they can to ensure that the Tanah
Merah project does not proceed,” she said. “If we lose this fight, if Shin
Yang builds its giant sawmill, we will not only lose virgin rainforests
that are the thriving heart beat of Indonesia, we will lose the one chance
we have to limit temperate increase to 1.5 degrees Celsius [2.7 degrees
Fahrenheit] and stabilize our climate.”

*Banner: Yanuaris Kobi, a member of the Auyu tribe, with his traditional
costume. Image by Nanang Sujana for The Gecko Project.*

Kirim email ke