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Posted: 2017-10-19T21:07:15Z | Updated: 2017-10-19T21:07:15Z The Tumultuous Truth Behind The Destruction Of Indonesias Forests | HuffPost

The Tumultuous Truth Behind The Destruction Of Indonesias Forests

The Tumultuous Truth Behind The Destruction Of Indonesias Forests
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To non-Indonesians, President Joko Widodo is the face of government there, as was Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono before him.

Citizens, however, know that authority in the land of a thousand islands lies not with the president or even with senators and governors, but with locally-elected regents or bopatis who came to power when President Muhammad Suharto s 30-year reign ended in 1998.

They emerged in a wave of euphoric reforms that were supposed to give power to the people, but instead many bopatis abused their positions to enrich themselves and their families, with devastating consequences for farmers, fishermen, and forests across the country consequences that ultimately impact us all because of the way they spill out in the form of greenhouse-gas emissions from deforestation and degradation.

Now an investigative series called The Making of a Palm Oil Fiefdom dives into the world of bopatis and shows how a few corrupt men, immune to central authority, took over large swathes of the countrys forests and destroyed them to make way for palm oil plantations, turning Indonesia into one of the worlds largest greenhouse-gas emitters one that sometimes contributes nearly 40% of the total worldwide emissions from deforestation

Produced jointly by MongaBay and The Gecko Project , the series is running concurrently on both sites and focuses on a few key bopatis, as well as on the local activists who oppose them.

Its must-reading for anyone interested in working to slow deforestation, because most current efforts focus on the federal government, while true power lies with bopatis, who in turn rely on the global palm oil market, of which we are all a part.

Its Not What You Think

The series focuses on one bopati, Darway Ali, who first won election in 1998 and then used his authority to award palm oil concessions across the district of Seruyan. The authors dive into the books of the companies that won concessions, and they find a cluster of shell ultimately held by Ali and his family and cronies. They show how Ali destroyed massive swaths of forest, and how his companies then sold the concessions to international powerhouses like Wilmar. When the next election came along, Ali used his massive wealth to bankroll a corrupt campaign that cemented his familys hold on power a pattern that replicated itself across Indonesia.

This agricultural surge is routinely cast as an economic miracle, rapidly bringing income and modernity to undeveloped regions. In this narrative, expansion was planned, controlled and regulated, the authors write. The harm to the environment was an unfortunate side effect of the moral imperative of development.

Thats certainly the narrative I tended to have in my head.

But there is another version of the story, one that played out through backroom deals and murky partnerships, they write. In this story, unaccountable politicians carved up other peoples land and sold it to the children of billionaires.

The first instalment, The Palm Oil Fiefdom , focuses on Ali.

The next instalment, The Land Deal Behind the Downfall of Indonesias Top Judge, follows the money trail that ended in the bribery of Akil Mochtar, chief justice of the nations highest court, to secure an election win in Borneo. It lays bare the connection between natural resources and money politics, and the middlemen who serve as the connective tissue in that relationship.

The final instalment, The Secret Deal to Destroy Paradise, exposes a shadowy cabal that constitutes the largest single threat to Indonesias forests today, with links from Papua to Malaysia to Yemen. It reveals the methods these people are using to hide their identities and the illegality of their projects as they forge east into the archipelagos last frontier.

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MongaBay/Gecko Project

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