Mendak artikel sae ngeunaan Bandung ti Jakarta Post, wios nya tos rada
lami ge. nyanggakeun...

------------
Features - March 27, 2001

BANDUNG (JP): Once upon a time, so the story goes, a shaman built a
long tunnel to channel water from a gigantic lake to another area.

The water flowed through the tunnel and the lake ran dry. It became a
new settlement for locals and grew prosperous; it later was called
Bandung, today the capital of West Java.

In the lore of the Sundanese people, this folktale (the tunnel,
Sanghyang Tikoro, is still there) explains why the Bandung area is
like a gigantic hollow in the heart of West Java, ringed by a crest of
hills and mountains stretching far into the province's hinterland.

But those famous hills, which became a favorite resort and retirement
area for the Dutch colonists, are disappearing fast.

With a swelling population of more than three million, Bandung is in
constant need of construction materials. Demand for gravel and
limestone for the construction of real estate complexes and private
housing has led to the proliferation of quarrying in the surrounding
hillsides.

Some of the mountains have disappeared, flattened by blasting and,
ironically, are now themselves the sites of housing complexes and
factories.

At least half of the hilly Padalarang area is now flat. It is the
center of the blasting where miners seek stones, gravel and limestone.
The blasting follows the line of the mountain range stretching from
Padalarang westward to Purwakarta.

With similar intensity, it moves southward to Sukabumi. Travel through
the area, and prepare to be confronted by ear-shattering explosions
and a swirl of dust.

Through the 1980s, Bandung's mountains were an attraction for local
and foreign tourists. People would stop their cars on a mountain road
to gaze out over the breath-taking panorama.

"We can't do that anymore," said Agus Handayana, a driver who has been
regularly traveling the Bandung-Jakarta route since 1980. "I would
prefer to keep going and get some rest in Jakarta or Bandung."

There is no official data on the number of mountains and hills within
the Bandung area, or how many of them have been leveled as a result of
the construction boom.

A geology expert at the Bandung Institute of Technology, Prof.
Sampurno, said there were numerous mountain ranges stretching out in
every direction.

"Westwards, the mountains and their foothills stretch from Padalarang
to Purwakarta. Southwards, they stand side by side like a giant wall
as far as Sukabumi. To the north, the Lembang and Dago highlands are
connected to Tangkuban Perahu and hundreds of mountains stretch as far
as Subang and Pamanukan. To the east, a line of mountains stretches
from Manglayang mountain in Ujungberung to Cikuray mountain in
Ciamis," he said.

None of them have escaped the blasting activities, which are taking
place on all sides. While uplands and hills in Padalarang have been
given over to housing complexes and factories, the other end of
Cicalengka has long been home to resorts for the middle classes.

Consequences

Today, the undesirable consequences are being felt. Bandung, which in
old stories was caressed by soft breezes, is now battered by strong,
dusty winds which frequently damage homes, uproot trees and disrupt
the telephone and electricity services.

"Bandung has no natural walls now," said Sampurno.

Even at normal rainfall levels, there is the danger of landslides as
the result of erosion in the surrounding hillsides. Homes have been
destroyed and people killed by landslides in Maragaasih district and
Dayeuh Kolot.

The products of the blasting have brought some physical benefits, such
as houses, roads and other infrastructure. Construction companies and
the government have made windfall gains from the quarrying.

Sampurno and environmental experts worry that the short-term gains
will be overshadowed by the long-term drawbacks.

"No one would deny the economic advantages of these activities, but as
humane and civilized people we have to put safeguards into place when
we do something," Sampurno said.

Unfortunately, any concerns about the consequences have been pushed
aside by avarice, he added.

"When our actions cause changes to nature, we are supposed to take
steps so as to prevent any adverse impacts. But now, only three things
occur to us: money, money and more money," Sampurno said.

"We are greedy and short-sighted people."

http://www.ecologyasia.com/news-archives/2001/mar-01/thejakartapost.com_20010327.D01.htm


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