http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/news/indonesia-moves-towards-approving-deforestation-plan-in-aceh/586752?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=jgnewsletter

Indonesia Moves Towards Approving Deforestation Plan in Aceh
April 19, 2013


The Indonesian government has said it aims to approve within a month a plan 
that would free up vast swathes of protected virgin rainforest on Sumatra 
island for commercial exploitation. 

Rights groups reacted with outrage at the news that the plan, which also needs 
to be passed by the Aceh provincial parliament, was making progress, saying it 
would only benefit huge foreign companies and not the area's people. 

But Canadian mining company East Asia Minerals, which conducts gold exploration 
in Aceh, hailed the progress as "positive news for mineral extraction in the 
area." 

The government aimed to approve the plan "in up to a month," senior forestry 
ministry official Hadi Daryanto said late on Thursday.

Rights groups say it will free up around 1.2 million hectares to be cleared. 

The head of the Aceh legislative committee overseeing the project, Tengku 
Anwar, said it had a lot of support in the legislature. "We hope it will go 
through as soon as possible," he said. 

Approval of the plan would open up the forest, on the northern tip of Sumatra 
province and home to critically endangered orangutans, rhinos, and elephants, 
for mining, paper and palm oil plantations. 

The Aceh government banned the granting of new logging permits six years ago to 
protect the forest, but a new administration that came in last year is in favor 
of allowing logging again. 

East Asia Minerals' chief executive Edward Rochette said the company was "very 
pleased" at the progress because if the plan was approved, it would help the 
group's gold exploration activities. 

"These new developments are good progress and positive news for mineral 
extraction in the area," Rochette said in a statement. 

The company said it was working with government officials, and company 
representatives on the ground in Aceh province were pushing for the forest to 
be reclassified from "protected forest" to "production forest." 

But Friends of the Earth Indonesia campaigner Dedi Ratih said the plan must be 
"immediately rejected." 

The plan "is being developed via a highly unhealthy process, in which foreign 
corporations are intervening and driving local policy," he said. 

Ian Singleton, who works in Aceh for the Sumatran Orangutan Conservation 
Programme, said the East Asia Minerals' statement was "amazing" and that it was 
"shooting itself in the foot." 

"The Aceh government has repeatedly claimed this plan is to benefit the people 
of Aceh, but this shows that's clearly not the case," he said. 

Agence France-Presse


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke