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Independent review finds Interhill Logging failing to comply with the law and confirms numerous conflicts between loggers and indigenous Penan communities in Borneo.
BERN, SWITZERLAND, September 15, 2009 --/WORLD-WIRE/-- An independent
review commissioned by Europe's leading tourism group, Accor, confirms
that Interhill Logging, a Sarawak logging group, is routinely violating
the forest legislation and failing to comply with internationally
acknowledged social and environmental standards.
The review has been undertaken following accusations by indigenous
Penan communities in the East Malaysian state of Sarawak that Interhill
Logging was violating their rights and damaging their forest
environment. Interhill employees have also been accused of intimidating
the locals and of sexually abusing Penan girls and women. The
Paris-based Accor group subsequently drew public criticism for its
cooperation with Interhill on the construction of the "Pullman
Interhill", a 23-storey luxury hotel in Sarawak's state capital of
Kuching.
The report shows that Interhill's logging operations in Sarawak's
Middle Baram region lack the free, prior and informed consent of the
local communities. Conflicts between the company and the local
communities have arisen on numerous issues, including the logging of
community forest reserves, the felling of fruit and poison-dart trees,
the pollution of drinking water supplies, the non-payment of adequate
compensation and a lack of transparency with regard to the quantity of
logs harvested. While the review provides details of how Penan have
been intimidated by logging company officials, it does not draw any
conclusions regarding the issue of sexual abuse, making reference to
the official investigations into this matter.
Logging operations "very definitely not sustainable"
According to the review, Interhill entered the 61,000-hectare
concession in Sarawak's Middle Baram region in 2002, immediately after
another logging company had logged the area twice within ten years.
Interhill expects to cut a total of 940,000 cubic metres of logs (20
tons per hectare) by 2013, whereas 2.2 million cubic metres (60 tons
per hectare) had already been removed from the Penan's forests between
1989 and 2001.
Right from the start, the review underlines the fact that "logging in
natural forest on such short cycles is very definitely not sustainable
as can be seen from the reduced harvest volumes being achieved by
Interhill compared to the much higher volumes achieved ten years ago
(...)." It concludes that certification according to the
internationally acknowledged FSC standards was out of the question,
with the lack of long-term land tenure being another reason why such
logging operations could not qualify as being sustainable.
While stating that "the forest is inevitably suffering degradation"
from Interhill's operations and that the future of the forest is
"already threatened", the review implicitly criticizes the fact that
the Sarawak Government permits short cycle re-entry. Peninsular
Malaysia and Indonesia, by comparison, do not allow re-entry logging
within a period of 35 years.
Compliance with the law in some cases minimal or absent
According to the review, Interhill Logging does not comply with the
legal requirements as defined by Sarawak's Natural Resources and
Environment Board: "Field observation indicated that full compliance
was not being achieved and in some cases was minimal or absent".
While the review thus states that Interhill is committing a number of
illegal acts, it fails to specify which legal requirements have not
been met by the loggers. One major offence appears to be the company's
failure to acquaint itself with the boundaries of the Native Customary
Rights lands within the logging concession, as stipulated in the
logging licence.
Another shortcoming of the review is that it fails to provide basic
documentary evidence, such as the logging licence, the forest
management plan or an apparently existing Environmental Impact
Assessment Report. While Sarawak's logging industry is used to
operating under a cloud of secrecy, the provision of such documents
would be required for an external review to be credible and
transparent. International standards for public access to environmental
information were set out by the United Nations in the 1998 Aarhus
Convention.
Logging fails to contribute to long-term development
Whereas the review suggests that the local communities derive some kind
of benefit and compensation from Interhill's logging operations, the
distribution of compensation is being handled arbitrarily, with several
communities insisting they have not been compensated at all. It is
significant to note that Interhill fails to keep records of the
compensation allegedly provided to the communities.
More importantly, the review concludes that "there is no inherent long
term development advantage" from the social benefits provided by the
company: "When Interhill eventually completes the logging and
presumably withdraws from the concession area, the Penan will be
deprived of the current benefits received and are unlikely to have
achieved much to elevate themselves from their current status,
described by the Marudi District Officer as being among Malaysia's
hard-core poor."
Sarawak's legal framework deeply unjust towards the local communities
While this review exposes a number of legal offences and shortcomings
relating to a specific logging company, it must be borne in mind that
Interhill is profiting from a deeply unjust legal and political
framework that systematically disadvantages and discriminates against
the indigenous communities.
It is generally acknowledged that Sarawak's forest legislation by no
means fosters sustainability and that forest law enforcement is a
serious problem. It is thus not surprising that the review states that
official inspections of Interhill's operations "do not appear to be
routinely conducted and are perhaps only very cursory" and that "the
pressure to comply with legally required terms and conditions is not
great."
Among the logging companies active in Sarawak, Interhill is a medium
player, and other companies might engage in even worse behaviour. The
Penan point, in particular, to misdeeds committed by Rimex, a company
that had been logging the area before 2002, and by Samling, a
multinational logging giant that is active in several adjacent
concessions and shares logging roads and a timber camp with Interhill.
Conclusions and demands formulated by the Bruno Manser Fund
The Bruno Manser Fund welcomes the release of the independent review
and thanks Accor for facilitating a dialogue process involving all the
stakeholders, of which the current review marks an initial outcome. It
must, however, be borne in mind that Interhill -- and subsequently
Accor as its business partner - will be judged by deeds and not by mere
words.
For a company like Interhill, corporate social responsibility must
first and foremost mean respecting the free, prior and informed consent
(FPIC) of the local communities. All measures must be undertaken from a
long-term perspective, permitting the local communities to engage in
sustainable development in what is already a heavily damaged forest
environment, even after the expiry of the current logging licence in
2013.
In practical terms, the Bruno Manser Fund asks Interhill
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to scale down its logging operations with immediate effect and to
remove all machinery from areas in which the company lacks the free,
prior and informed consent of the local communities.
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to remove from the field all employees who have intimidated the
locals or who have factually or allegedly been involved in cases of
sexual abuse.
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to stop denying that sexual abuse is a serious problem for the
indigenous communities and to fully comply with and actively support
police investigations.
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to acknowledge that the local communities, in particular the
Penan, have legitimate claims to the forests within the Interhill
concession and to refrain from legal action that is directed against
the Penan's land claims
As for the social benefits and compensation owed by Interhill to the
local communities for its past and current logging operations, a
solution will have to be negotiated between the actors involved. Social
benefits and compensation should be aimed at empowering the local
communities and must not be allowed to corrupt indiviuals or to
increase the communities' dependency on the logging company.
CONTACT:
Bruno Manser Fund,
Association for the Peoples of the Rainforest
Socinstrasse 37,
4051 Basel, Switzerland
Tel. +41 61 261 94 74
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