
Capuchin friars in Indonesia’s North Sumatra province want the country’s government to stop activities that threaten the ecosystem of the world’s largest volcanic lake and protect the rights of tribal people. Source: UCA News.
The Capuchin Commission for Justice, Peace, and Integrity of Creation in Medan Province is supporting the local people’s struggle to save Lake Toba from the alleged over-exploitation of its buffer zone area by Indonesia’s largest wood pulp producer, PT Toba Pulp Lestari (TPL).
“The phenomena of floods, landslides and increasingly widespread agrarian conflicts are direct impacts of exploitative activities that ignore the balance of nature,” the Capuchin commission’s chairman, Fr Hilarius Kemit, said in a statement yesterday.
The statement comes as the indigenous Tano Batak community and others have intensified their protests, asking the Government to suspend the licences granted to the pulp company in 1983, which allowed it access to 184,486 hectares of land near the lake.
Excessive land use and the felling of trees and vegetation around the lake have led to a decline in water levels. Pollution and excessive human activity in the region also negatively impact the area’s biodiversity and the lake, environmentalists say.
However, local people and activists say the company’s agents try to crush the protest through intimidation of the leaders.
The latest example was a gift packet that environmental activist Delima Silalahi received on May 30. The packet contained a dead but bleeding bird, interpreted as a veiled threat against her life.
Ms Silalahi received the packet after she led a protest on May 26 with hundreds of people from the Tano Batak community before the North Sumatra province parliament office, demanding the closure of the pulp-making company.
Fr Kemit said that they support the local people’s call to the company to stop all its activities “after seeing the impact of the destruction of biodiversity in the area.”
He said the tribal people have preserved nature for generations, and the government should stop intimidating them through criminal cases in the name of protecting the environment.
“Indigenous peoples and local communities are not obstacles to development, but rather guardians of ecological values and local wisdom that have been passed down for centuries,” the statement said.
FULL STORY
Indonesian Capuchins join protest for world’s largest volcanic lake (By Ryan Dagur, UCA News)