Sunday, December 5, 2010

State govt to meet PM to finalise Bakun purchase

3 December 2010

KUCHING: The state government will meet up with the Prime Minister to finalise the buying over of Bakun dam from the federal government, revealed Chief Minister Pehin Sri Abdul Taib Mahmud.

The Bakun Dam project is worth a staggering RM7.3 billion and is owned by the Ministry of Finance Incorporated.

Sarawak has shown keen interest to acquire the dam as it needed extra power to implement its’ projects under the Sarawak Corridor of Renewable Energy (SCORE).

“We are going to have a meeting with the prime minister (on the Bakun Dam). We are waiting for him to arrange his time,” Taib told the media after launching the Sarawak Foundry and Engineering Industry Association Building and Automotive and Wielding Institute of Sarawak at Demak Laut Industrial Estate Phase II, here yesterday.

Sarawak has placed RM7 billion to bid for Bakun Dam.

Meanwhile, Taib who is also the Minister of Planning and Resources Management said Sarawak was targeting to harness 7,000 megawatts of power, mainly from hydro-electricity by 2020 to attract investors into SCORE.

He said among the projects that would require high-intensive power supply are aluminium smelting plants, magnesium plants, pulp and paper plants, glass panel plants and shipbuilding.

Source: The Borneo Post Online

URL: http://www.theborneopost.com/?p=78343

Monday, November 29, 2010

Parliament: Bakun Opens Job Opportunities To Original Residents

25 November 2010

KUALA LUMPUR, 25 Nov (Bernama) -- The Bakun Hydroelectric Dam which will be fully operational next year will open opportunities for various types of work to original residents of the area.

Deputy Finance Minister Datuk Dr Awang Adek Hussin said the new jobs will be in the technical field, in information technology, in maintenance work and as boat skippers and rescuers of wild life.

These are among the jobs that the project will create, and "we are of the view that local residents should be given priority," he told the Dewan Rakyat here Thursday.

He as replying to Dr Michael Jeyakumar Devaraj (PSM-Sungai Siput) and Datuk Ago Anak Dagang (BN-Kanowit) on job opportunities for the original residents of Bakun who have long been involved in agriculture and are said to lack skills for work in other sectors.

Awang said the government agreed that priority in providing jobs be given to the original residents now living around the dam.

Answering a question from Dr Jeyakumar on a promise that the Sarawak government was supposed to have made to original residents of Sungai Balui at Belaga, Awang said there was no such pledge.

"The Sarawak government never promised to give a house and five acres of agricultural land to affected residents, including those at Sungai Balui in Belaga," he said.

Every family had been paid compensation covering the land, house and crop affected by the construction of the Bakun dam, and also got three acres of agricultural land, he added.

Awang said the federal government could not intervene in the claims of the original residents for a bigger lot because land came under the purview of the state government.

-- BERNAMA

URL: http://www.bernama.com/bernama/v5/newsindex.php?id=545470

No free houses, land for those affected by Bakun dam


Thu, 25 Nove 2010 18:20

By Patrick Lee

KUALA LUMPUR: The government has never promised to give free houses and farmlands to those displaced by the construction of the Bakun hyro-electric dam.

Deputy Finance Minister Awang Adek Hussin told the Dewan Rakyat this after Sungai Siput MP D Jeyakumar asked about the promises of free houses and five acres of farmland for the Sungai Balui residents in Belaga.

Instead, he said that each family would be given a certain amount of compensation for the land, house and farming land affected by the dam's construction.

The deputy minister also added that community halls and main roads leading to Bakun from these resettlement villages would be constructed as well.

Awang said that each family received an average of RM51,980 in compensation.

He also said that the state government would reduce the price of houses sold to former Sungai Balui residents by 50%, or by RM25,000 per unit.

Awang also said that families whose houses were worth less than RM25,000 would be given a loan to purchase these houses.

He said that the federal government had allocated a total of RM534.05 million to the Sarawak government for communities affected by the construction of the Bakun hyro-electric dam in 2005.

Major concern

The deputy minister added that this money would then be managed by the Sarawak state authorities.

Jeyakumar told the House that he had worked in the area in 1984, and visited many of the places that would be affected by the dam's construction.

"My friends who live there tell me that they have encountered many problems after they have been resettled," the MP said, adding that job opportunities were a major concern for many of Belaga's former inhabitants.

"In the new place, they have no work, and many men of working age have to work (in cities) far away, such as Sibu and Kuching," he said, adding that many of the locals were farmers and were only able to find low-paying jobs in the city.

Jeyakumar then asked Awang if it was possible to give these people more farmland.

"Three acres is not enough. What about other places in the interior? Can they be opened for farming? Can new larger locations, or in the lower areas (tanah hilir) be given to them?" he asked.

Although not directly answering Jeyakumar's question, Awang agreed and said that the matter needed to be given more consideration.

He, however, assured the Sungai Siput MP that job opportunities would be made available at the Bakun dam itself when it becomes fully operational in 2011.

Source: Free Malaysia Today
URL: http://www.freemalaysiatoday.com/fmt-english/politics/barisan-nasional/13333-no-free-houses-land-for-those-affected-by-bakun-dam

[BPAC Media Release] Baram people are vehemently against the proposed mega Baram HEP Dam

14 November 2010

The Baram Protection Action Committee (BPAC) would like to refute the statement made by Councillor Dennis Ngau which was published in the Borneo Post dated 5 November, 2010.

The Councillor was reported to have said that majority of the Baram people are in favour of the Baram HEP dam and that only the opposition and a few NGOs are against the project.

The BPAC regards the statement as misleading and unjustified and strongly urge the said Councillor to retract his statement forthwith and make public apology to the people of Baram through the same newspaper as well as through other papers which are in Bahasa Malaysia and Chinese. The BPAC strongly deplores such statement and utterances reportedly made by Councillor Dennis Ngau on the following grounds:-

1. That the statement misleads the government leaders, relevant authorities and the general public by saying that Baram people support the mega Baram HEP dam project when in fact a vast majority of the people are strongly against it and demanded for it to be scrapped.

2. Councillor Dennis Ngau had not made any visits to each of the longhouses identified to be affected directly and indirectly by the project and had not consulted the villagers about their views towards the project.

3. As far as the Baram people who reside along the main Baram are concerned, there was no referendum being conducted by the Councillor on the people’s response towards the project.

4. Councillor Dennis comes from a village situates along the Apoh River, away from the main Baram River. He foresees that the Baram HEP dam will not adversely affect him directly while in fact he will be affected in other ways.

5. Dennis’s statement reflects total disregard and disrespect for the basic and inherent rights of the people along the main Baram to decide for ourselves on matters affecting our people’s interests, livelihood, survival and future.

6. His statement is an open insult to our people’s intelligence and our capacity to think, act and or articulate our views, concerns, and demands.

7. His statement reflects that he condones the “bulldoze tactic” approach to bring so-called development which purportedly benefit the Baram people but actually brings disaster. This is sheer insanity.



SAVE THE BARAM AND ITS PEOPLE. STOP THE DAM. PEOPLE FIRST, PROFITS LATER. BARAMITES AND SARAWAKIANS, STAND UP FOR YOUR RIGHTS!

(Philip Jau)

Chairman

BPAC.

‘Raise Rajang River water level’

12 November 2010

KUALA LUMPUR: Deputy Tourism Minister Datuk Dr James Dawos Mamit on Wednesday urged the parties responsible for the impoundment of the Bakun Dam, to release more water to increase the water level of Rajang River.

He said the impoundment had adversely affected the tourism industry in the area and the livelihood of the people downstream.

“Because of the shallow water level, some of them lost their jobs as tourist guides and have to chop firewood for a living because there are no more tourists coming after the water level dropped,” he told reporters after launching the “Jeffry Lim Freedom to Express Essence of Love” photo exhibition, here.

Dawos was commenting on a newspaper report yesterday, that the low water level in the upper reaches of Rajang River had affected the tourism industry in the area.

The water level has been receding since the Bakun Dam impoundment began and eventually dropped by more than four metres.

Dawos, who is the former environment adviser for the Bakun Dam project, said that one of the conditions for the contractors involved in the project was to release 150 cubic metres of water per second.

“But now, the contractor has only released 110 cubic metres of water per second,” he said.

Since the impoundment began on Oct 13, the water level of several rivers including Sungai Balui and Rajang dropped drastically which resulted in the operations of express boats, the main mode of transport in the area, being affected.

Meanwhile, the exhibition showcases Lim’s 15 years of experience in photography in over 35 countries where he shared his love for his family, friends, career and the community through visual storytelling.

The exibition is being held at the Bangsar Shopping Centre from today until Nov 19. — Bernama

Source: The Borneo Post Online
URL: http://www.theborneopost.com/?p=74611

Dawos: S'wak Hidro did not follow rules

Friday November 12, 2010

KUALA LUMPUR: A former environment adviser to the Sarawak government is fuming over the fact that the impoundment of the Bakun dam has caused low water levels at the Rajang river.

Thus, river travel and tourism have been severely affected in Belaga.

Datuk Dr James Dawos Mamit warned that the drop of more than four metres in water levels was a consequence of ignoring downstream needs.

He claimed that Sarawak Hidro, which is fully-owned by the Ministry of Finance Inc., had failed to abide by the requirements stated in the Downstream Environment Assess­ment study.

Source: The Star
URL: http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=%2F2010%2F11%2F12%2Fnation%2F7416079&sec=nation

Voices From Temacapulín

Mark Bujang of BRIMAS, Sarawak joins Rivers for Life 3 in Mexico, in solidarity with other mega dam fighters from around the world.

Authorities still have no answer to cause of logjam

30 October 2010

By ZORA CHAN
zora@thestar.com.my

Photos by PHILIP HII and ZORA CHAN

IT HAS been nearly a month since the logjam disaster along the Rajang River, Malaysia’s longest river, but the authorities have yet to determine its causes and the extent of the environmental damage caused.

Certain quarters, including river dwellers, are convinced that uncontrolled logging is to blame, judging from the type of debris ranging from waste logs and cut wood to commercial logs.

On the other hand, others say timber companies should be absolved of all blame.

Whatever the causes are, the disaster is an indication that unsustainable activities have to be addressed transparently, urgently and effectively by all stakeholders.

A local expert told StarMetro that a disaster of such magnitude could be attributed mainly to large-scale land clearing activities.

Scary sight: Environment and Public Health Minister Datuk Seri Wong Soon Koh (second from right) assessing the situation at the Sibu Express Boat Terminal on Oct 8.

“Those who have cut down the numerous logs and then disposed of them throughout the upper Baleh catchment area are the most likely culprits.

“Some may blame the weather but I am sure there have been similar weather conditions in the past where there were no reports of logjams,” environmental chemist Prof Lau Seng said.

According to him, large-scale land clearing would change the hydrological characteristics of the catchment area.

“It increases the runoff, causing erosion and resulting in stream overflows and soil deposits in rivers, making them shallower. This will eventually lead to flooding.

“The faster runoff also means the water has higher kinetic energy and will be able to carry more weight, thus washing down debris like waste logs and branches in its path,” he added.

Lau, who is the director of the Centre for Technology Transfer and Consultancy at Universiti Malaysia Sarawak, said that the clearing of land and debris piling could also obstruct the flow of water and force water to seep into the ground.

When the extent of soil water saturation is high and spread over a large area, then the saturated soil would move under gravitational force. This large-scale movement of soil is known as a landslide or, if the soil is in a slurry form, a mudslide.

Lau said the landslide or mudslide that caused the logjam could not have happened overnight but could have been the result of accumulated water seepage over a period as water moved very slowly in the ground.

In short, he said the logjam was the “result of excessive land clearing activities that were not done in the best interests of all.”

“This is not natural disaster,” he insisted.

If there was any lesson to be learned from the logjam, Lau said the people should insist that all resource harvesters must comply with standard environmentally wise practices. He added that they should also ask for better enforcement measures.


Prof Lau Seng

In short, he said the logjam was the “result of excessive land clearing activities that were not done in the best interests of all.”

“This is not natural disaster,” he insisted.

If there was any lesson to be learned from the logjam, Lau said the people should insist that all resource harvesters must comply with standard environmentally wise practices. He added that they should also


“We can develop an area but we have to do it in a sustainable way,” he said.

“The logjam is only a symptom of how bad the environmental situation is. The cause includes excessive activities on land,” he added.

On the extent of the environmental damage, Lau said one of the most obvious was the amount of different fish species killed .

“Other damage is more difficult to quantify, such as damage to the spawning grounds and to the food webs,” he said, adding that the damage also depended on the amount of suspended solids (SS) in the river.

He said the SS could be high and deposition of these SS onto the riverbed might bury benthic organisms (comprising crabs, prawns and snails) and kill them.

“These organisms are food for the fish and when the food becomes scarce, fewer fish can be supported,” he said.

The most obvious impact is the drastic decrease of fish in the river and locals, particularly those staying between Kapit and Sibu, who rely on riverine fish would be affected by this situation in the coming months.

“If the benthic organisms are greatly affected, then the quantity of fish in the river will take a longer time to recover,” he warned.

“For those in the upper Baleh or near the estuary like from Sarikei and Igan, the impact will be much reduced as tidal dilution would buffer the muddy water,” he said.

Lau was of the opinion that the authorities should take stock of the existing situation in the Rajang basin as well as in other river basins.

“We need to know quantitatively which areas are severely damaged, moderately damaged or slightly damaged,” he said.

He proposed that as a short-term measure, catchment clean-ups be carried out.

Waste logs and other debris should not be dumped indiscriminately and secure places should be provided as disposal grounds which are far from rivers and runoff paths.

Long-term plans include protecting headwater areas, steep slope areas and buffer strips along all waterways, he said.

He said the government must make sure degraded areas were rehabilitated by planting indigenous trees and monitoring their growth as not all seedlings could survive in degraded areas.

“The state should zone out environmentally sensitive land for conservation purposes,” he said.

Another way forward is to set up an integrated management for the entire Rajang River basin and take into consideration the needs of all stakeholders like foresters, plantations, longhouses/villages/townships, river transport, subsistence farming, the ecological needs of fish and other organisms, public water supply, recreational water demand and industrial demand for water.

Lau said local people should be empowered to be the custodians of the river, incorporating traditional knowledge as well as modern technology in the management of the river basin.

“The people need to understand the concept, the authorities needs to learn to share their responsibilities and the authorities, industries and land users need to give greater consideration to environmental or ecological needs,” he said.

Source: The Star

URL: http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=%2F2010%2F10%2F30%2Fsarawak%2F7317190&sec=sarawak

This too will happen in Baram if the gov't still insist building the Dams



31 October 2010

by Wan Luhan

BELAGA: Residents of Long Mejawah become the first victims facing livelihood hardship following the impoundment of Bakun Hydro Electricity Dam on October 13.

The 51-door longhouse in Long Mejawah consists of 300 odd Kayan inhabitants who are now literally cut off from outside world due to the sharp decline of water level in the Balui River. Their communication with outside world has been interrupted, not to say obtaining essential supplies, sending children to schools, travelling to Belaga Bazaar to work or for official matters and other unexpected problems that may arise.

It is reported that people have to take an alternate route by using logging track road on motor vehicle through Bukit Jayung which will take them six hours to reach Belaga Bazaar. The fare for a single trip of estimated distance of 30 kilometres is RM70 per head or a total of RM140 for the return trip. But it only takes them three hours to travel to Bintulu.

What puzzling the inhabitants was the approval and funding by the government to construct a road from Long Mejawah to Belaga Town under the Eighth Malaysia Plan (8MP) at the cost of RM13 million which until today has not been materialised. What they feel dissatisfied is the government has been capable to rush and achieved the construction of the 70 kilometres from Bakun to Murum, and yet the construction of 30km road from Long Mejawah to Belaga Bazaar remains a mystery.

The people also feel unhappy with the poor arrangement made by the government without taking into consideration of the hardship that affect the people with the commencement of impoundment on Bakun Hydro Electric Dam while leaving the people to face the consequences.

The local residents are also dissatisfied with the government to give priority to commercial interests and the interests of the people are placed secondary. This, they claimed, contradict to Prime Minister Datuk Seri Mohd Najib Tun Razak’s philosophy ‘1Malaysia, People First, Performance Now’.

With the 10MP going to kick off the ground, where is the pledge made under 8MP? This is the answer the residents in Long Mejawah want to know.

Women folks in Long Mejawah most concerned are about the safety of their children. Their children are now compelled to walk back from their boarding school every weekend. The journey takes up from three to four hours and, occasionally they have to walk on dried part of the river which often, full of debris and pebbles.

According to an elderly folk, Lidi Sali, he travelled to Belaga District Office to collect his monthly welfare aids. He said with the communication being interrupted since the impoundment began on October 13, he had to make a detour to Belaga.

“But my welfare aids is only suffice to pay the fares of RM140,” he says, adding that previously he only paid RM30 for a return trip to Belaga Bazaar on an express boat.

Meanwhile, local people are disappointed with the Government citing “unusual dry weather, resulting in rapid decline in water level,” as the reason for the drastic drop in water level in Balui River.

They point out communication between Kapit to Belaga and Belaga to Long Mejawah has been disrupted due to low water level. There are nine longhouses and one primary school along the route between Long Mejawah and Belaga Bazaar.

This rural folks are now most worried about what is the future lying ahead since the impoundment will take about a year to complete and yet, the water level of Balui River has reached to such a critical level only two weeks after the impoundment has started.

Petrified Baram natives want ‘dam plan’ scrapped

29 October 2010

By Joseph Tawie

Some 20,000 indigenous natives of Kayan, Kenyah, Saben and Penan communities living in the Baram division are horrified to hear about the voluminous fast-flowing Rajang River drying up, a phenomenon blamed in part to the impoundment of the controversial Bakun dam which began on Oct 13.

The unexpected dry spell and the continuous impoundment has caused untold misery and hardship for those living along the Kapit, Belaga, Nanga Merit and Pelagus areas.

“Never before have the Baram residents ever heard of the Rajang River drying up or seen such a thing,” said Philip Jau, chairman of Baram Protection Action Committee in a statement to FMT.

“We don’t want this (dry up) to happen to the Baram River, if the construction of Baram dam is to proceed,” he said.

“The committee therefore demands that the government scrap its plan to build the Baram dam which has a capacity of 1,000 MW. Otherwise at least 20,000 indigenous Kayan, Kenyah, Kelabit, Saben and Penan communities from hundreds of longhouses and villages situated along the Baram River valley will be affected and displaced,” he said.

Jau said the majority of the communities living in Baram “strongly and vehemently oppose the Baram dam” and also all the other planned and currently under construction dams throughout Sarawak. He said the state had more than enough supply of energy even without these additional dams.

Not consulted

Jau said that the Baram residents were never consulted about the construction of the Baram dam.

“Even though it is still in its planning stage, the people have a right to know and to decide whether to agree or disagree with the project,” he said, pointing out that if all the planned 12 dams and Bakun Dam are operational, Sarawak would have an insane amount of surplus electricity or 600% surplus.

“The energy generated from Bakun Dam alone is more than enough to power Sarawak,” he said.

The Baram dam is expected to submerge an area of 38,900 hectares (389 sq km) of land and forest. The area is mostly native customary land, and consists of temuda, cultivated lands, gardens, villages, churches, graveyards, community forests and sites of historical significance.

The people are going to lose their longhouses, villages, properties, lands and forests as well as the history as a result of submergence and displacement by the Baram dam.

The dam will also submerge the existing government schools, medical clinics, airstrip and other building facilities which the government have spent a lot of tax payers’ money on.

The longhouse/villages downstream affected by the Baram Dam are Long Laput, Sungai Dua, Sri Kenawan, Uma Bawang, Long Miri (Daleh Pelutan), Long Pilah and Long Kesseh.

In the upstream and within the dam reservoir area are Long Na’ah, Long Liam, Long San, Long Selatong (Kiri & Kanan), Long Apu, Long Julan Asal, Long Julan Pelutan, Long Anap, Long Palai, Long Je’eh, Long Moh, Long Sela’an and Long Semiyang as well as some villages in Akah River that are Long Beku, Ba’ Abang, Long Tap and Long Tebangan.

Source: Hornbill Unleashed

URL: http://hornbillunleashed.wordpress.com/2010/10/29/1123/

The mighty Rajang River not so mighty after all

Chris Reubens
Friday, 29 October 2010 14:26

COMMENT Malaysia's longest river - the Rajang in Sarawak - is a source of food, income and a mean of transport for the people living along the 640km waterway.

Once the pride of Sarawak, the Rajang is now old and sick with years of abuses, mostly man-made. And recently, there's growing fear that the water level is running low. It has reached a critically low point as reported.

On Oct 8, the Rajang was suffocated with logjam causing losses of RM2.7 million after bridges and jetties were swept away with tons of debris, about 70km from Kapit. It affected cargo services and express passenger boats for a few days.

Fed by several tributaries, the river is regarded as a lifeline for the people living along it, from Sibu to the interior districts of Kanowit, Song, Kapit and Belaga.

Also, rubbish and debris from residents situated near the rivers, planks and unwanted logs from the jungles had taken its toll on the mighty river which is brownish instead of being clear and a clean source of water.

It has always been a joke among frequent flyers who view the river from the air and boat travellers along the river, that if you want a glass of "teh-si", all you need is to scoop it from the Rajang River.

The Upper Rajang River is known as Batang Balui by the Orang Ulu with tributaries which included Katibas River, Balleh River and Bangkit River.

Deputy Chief Minister Dr. George Chan said the state government has yet to ascertain the loss to the ecological system as the Sarawak Natural Resources and Environment Board and Sarawak Rivers Board are still doing their investigation.

Read more at http://www.malaysianmirror.com/media-buzz-detail/41-opinion/50232-the-mighty-rajang-river-not-so-mighty-after-all

Govt ignores Penan's choice of resettlement land

Thu, 28 Oct 2010 12:53

By Joseph Tawie

MIRI: The government’s plan to relocate about 1,000 Penans affected by the Murum Dam project to a 24,000 hectares area has been described as “merely paying lip service”.

“We still don't know how the government came to a decision on the size of the area without consulting us,” said Ramlie Bujang, a spokesman for the Peleiran-Murum Penan Affair Committee (Pemupa).

Land Development Minister James Jemut Masing recently revealed that the government will alienate 24,000 hectares of the land in upper Murum for the Penans.

“This revelation would be another lip service from the minister,” Ramlie said.

Pemupa represents more than 1,000 residents from six Penan villages: Long Singu, Long Luar, Long Tangau, Long Pelutan (Menapa), Long Malim, Long Wat as well as the Kenyah-Badeng of Long Umba who are directly affected by Murum Dam project.

The Penans have themselves proposed and informed the government on their preferred choice of resettlement areas that have large tracts of natural forest.

They include Metalon River area in upper Peleiran as proposed by four villages - Long Singu, Long Luar, Long Tangau and Long Pelutan (Menapa), the upper Tegulang River area as proposed by Long Wat village and, the upper Malim-Danum area as proposed by two villages of Long Malim and Long Umba.

He said the respective Penans proposed these areas as their resettlement areas because they are still rich with forest resources needed to sustain their daily livelihood.

“We want our forest in these areas to be preserved and free from any kind of human development activities such as logging and large scale plantations,” he said.

Revoke plantation leases

Ramlie also urged the government to revoke the provisional leases for plantations in upper Murum area, and immediately stop companies from further exploitating forests in the area.

“The state government must revoke all the provisional leases for plantations within the catchment area of the Murum Dam project before the Penans agree to be relocated.

“Pemupa is shocked to learn that the state government has leased the Murum catchment area to Shin Yang Forestry Sdn Bhd for an oil palm plantation.

“It is disturbing to learn that the areas which we proposed as resettlement areas have been parceled out for oil palm plantations.

"We have found out that Shin Yang Company has started clearing and felling the forest for oil palm plantation in Metalon River area without our consent.

“The clearing of forest by the Shin Yang within the proposed Metalon resettlement area will adversely affect our livelihood in the near future,” said Ramlie.

Pemupa strongly urged the government to alienate land for the Penans before the Murum hydroelectric power (HEP) Dam is completed.

“We have seen the failure and unfulfilled promises of the government to the people at the Bakun Asap-Koyan resettlement scheme, no land at all has been alienated to them.

“It is with anxiety and grave concern for our community over the ongoing construction of Murum dam project that we made our stand to the government.

"However, our voices have fallen on deaf ears,” added Ramlie.

Source: Free Malaysia Today
URL: http://www.freemalaysiatoday.com/fmt-english/politics/sabah-and-sarawak/12144-govt-ignores-penans-choice-of-resettlement-land

Monday, November 22, 2010

Councillor Ngau must apologise to Baram folk

15 November 2010

By Joseph Tawie

KUCHING: Furious residents in Baram are demanding an apology and a retraction from a Parti Persaka Bumiputera Bersatu (PBB) councillor for saying that Baram folk were 'in favour' of the controversial Baram Hydro-elctric dam. PBB is led by Chief Minister Taib Mahmud.

Dennis Ngau of Telang Usan must apologise for his misleading statement, said Baram Protection Action Committee (BPAC) chairman Philip Jau.

“He must retract his statement and make a public apologise to the people of Baram as they are very angry with him, “said Jau.

Ngau had reportedly said that the people of Baram were supportive of the Baram dam project and that only the opposition and a few of non-governmental organisations were against the project.

His statement was published in The Borneo Post on Nov 5.

Said Jau: “BPAC regards the statement as misleading and unjustified and strongly urge the councillor to retract his statement and make a public apology to the people of Baram through the same newspaper as well as through other papers which are in Bahasa Malaysia and Chinese.

“The BPAC strongly deplores such a statement and utterances reportedly made by Ngau which can mislead the government leaders, relevant authorities and the general public by saying that Baram people support the mega Baram dam project.

"In fact the vast majority of the (Baram) people are strongly against it and have demanded for it to be scrapped.

“Councillor Ngau has not visited each of the longhouses identified to be affected directly and indirectly by the project and has not consulted the villagers about their views towards the project.

“As far as the Baram people who reside along the main Baram River are concerned, there was no referendum conducted by the councillor on the people’s response towards the project.”

Sheer insanity

Jau said Ngau may chose to believe that his village situated along the Apoh River, away from the main Baram River would not be affected by the dam but the "fact is his village will be affected in other ways."

"Ngau’s statement reflects total disregard and disrespect for the basic and inherent rights of the people along the main Baram River to decide for ourselves on matters affecting our people’s interests, livelihood, survival and future.

“His statement is an open insult to our people’s intelligence and our capacity to think, act and or articulate our views, concerns, and demands,” he said, accusing Ngau of condoning the government's ‘bulldozing tactic’ to bring so-called development to supposedly benefit Baram people.

“The construction of the dam does not bring development; it actually brings disaster. This is sheer insanity.” Jau warned.

He urged the government to put a stop to the dam in order to save Baram and its people.

“The government should think of the people first and profits later,” he said, calling on Baramites and Sarawakians to stand up for their rights.

Source: Free Malaysia Today

URL: http://www.freemalaysiatoday.com/fmt-english/politics/sabah-and-sarawak/12864-councillor-ngau-must-apologise-to-baram-folk

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Logjam exposes Sarawak’s unscrupulous logging

26 October 2010



The Sarawak state government must face the shame of being exposed before the whole world for their vain attempts all these years to hide the wanton rape of the Sarawak forests, says Kua Kia Soong.

The environmental disaster of the recent 50km logjam on the Rajang River has totally exposed the Sarawak state and federal government’s attempts all these years to tell the world that they practise responsible logging. The logs and debris from upriver above Kapit have destroyed fish life and affected bridges and villages along the length of the river. The State Environment Minister has called this disaster “unprecedented and beyond imagination”.

Land Development Minister James Masing has blamed unscrupulous timber companies for the disaster. He said this was the third time in three years that such an incident had happened and called on the authorities concerned to take their job more seriously and enforce the laws stringently.

Now, if the Environment Ministry and the Land Development Ministries are not the authorities concerned with logging, who are? Even before this latest disaster, the once mighty and beautiful Rajang had long been defiled by earth and debris from irresponsible logging upstream and turned into an unsightly river the colour of teh tarik.

State govt must bear total responsibility

For years, the Sarawak state government has ruthlessly kept out NGO activists such as me from their own country state of Sarawak. The reason given by the Immigration officers at Kuching Airport is that we have been excluded for “anti-logging activities”. This is a total disgrace for Malaysia, which tries to pride itself as a modern democratic country that practises human rights.

Sarawak’s Chief Minister Abdul Taib bin Mahmud has dominated politics for the past two decades. He has the sole authority to grant or deny logging concessions. The licensing of logging concessions has been used as a political tool and a means to amass personal wealth. Timber tycoons and the ruling government party own controlling interests in all the major newspapers, TV stations and radio stations and they ensure that all information about logging, corruption and nepotism ise censored.

Thus, the Sarawak state government must bear total responsibility for this latest disaster and face the shame of being exposed before the whole world for their vain attempts all these years to hide the wanton rape of the Sarawak forests. Sarawak has been reliant on timber as the largest source of revenue for the state for too long. It contributes nearly a billion ringgit annually, or about 37 per cent of the total state revenue. Logging companies have wantonly encroached on forest that traditionally belongs to the Kayan, Kenyah, and Penan. Deforestation has also resulted in the decimation of jungle life that the indigenous people hunt for food. There have also been reports of logging workers robbing Penan communities, molesting their women and desecrating their graves It has been estimated that 90 per cent of the virgin jungle has been logged in the past 40 years alone.

Kua Kia Soong is director of the human rights group Suaram

Source: Aliran
URL: http://aliran.com/3131.html

Forestry: an unnatural disaster in Sarawak

22 October 2010

By Pak Bui

Sarawak Forestry Corporation Chief Executive Officer (CEO) and forestry department director Len Talif Salleh has dismissed the horrific ecological and infrastructure damage wrought by the Rejang log-jam as a “natural disaster”.

Len Talif argued that heavy rain, rather than over-logging or the impoundment of the Bakun Dam, had caused a catastrophic pile-up of cut logs and debris on the surface of Malaysia’s largest river. The accumulation of rubbish had blocked river traffic, wrecked boat jetties and killed fish and aquatic life, leaving communities without an important source of nutrition.

The forestry head tried to buttress his claims using technology. He said the 3D Airborne Hyperspectral Sensor taken on October 15 had shown the area was still covered by forest, but traces of landslides could be seen due to a heavy downpour at the Ulu Sungai Melatai catchment area.

Many Sarawakians are skeptical. They have traveled up the Rejang by boat, or have flown overhead, and have seen with their own ‘3D sensors’ – their eyes – the destruction caused by uncontrolled logging.

Read more here: http://hornbillunleashed.wordpress.com/2010/10/22/10886/

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Rajang Logjam A Natural Disaster, Says Sarawak Forestry

SIBU, Oct 20 (Bernama) -- The recent logjam on the Rajang River was a natural disaster caused by heavy downpour and not by overlogging or impoundment of the Bakun Dam, according to the initial report by the Sarawak Forestry Corporation.

Sarawak Forestry chief executive officer Datuk Len Talif Salleh said the 3D Airborne Hyperspectral Sensor taken on Oct 15 showed that the area was still covered by forest but traces of landslides could be seen due to heavy downpour at the Ulu Sungai Melatai catchment area.

"We want to clarify the misconception and nonsense from an overseas source that the logjam was caused by overlogging or impoundment of Bakun Dam," he told reporters at the Sarawak Forest Department Excellence Service Award presentation here Tuesday night.

Overlogging was not an issue because there was no logging activity on both sides of Melatai River since 2006, he said.

-- BERNAMA

Rajang River is drying up

By PHILIP HII

philiphii@thestar.com.my

19 October 2010

SIBU: Less than two weeks after the logjam disaster in Rajang River, the country’s longest river is again a cause for concern for people living along its banks.

Express boats have not been able to ply the Sibu-Belaga-Sibu routes since Friday as the river is drying up due to the current dry spell. The only option left for travellers is the gruelling journey on the 190km Bintulu-Bakun road.

Floating pontoons at the Kapit Express Boat Wharf along Khoo Peng Loong Road here are now resting on a muddy river bed.

“This time the water level went down really fast. Just 10 days ago, it almost reached the road level, a drop of more than 2m,” boat skipper Lau Ah Kuok said.

Shrinking Rajang: The water level at the mighty Sungai Rajang is dropping fast as the dry spell hits Sarawak and water is being diverted into the Bakun dam. The edge of the river, which had about 2m of water (inset) is now little more than a muddy bank.

Lau said he believed the drastic change in the water level was partly due to the impoundment of the 205m-high Bakun Dam which began last Wednesday.

The flooding of the dam, which is South-East Asia’s largest, is estimated to take seven months and in the process, would flood 69,000ha of land.

Social activist Wong Meng Chuo, who has a masters degree in Environmental Management from the Imperial College in London, said he was worried that a prolonged drought would pose severe environmental and ecological consequences below Bakun Dam.

Wong said the Rajang River was denied one-third of the water source with the impoundment of the dam.

“Firstly, river navigation in some areas will stop due to low water. Secondly, salty water from the ocean would come up to as far as Sibu. Thirdly, marine and river life will be affected,” Wong pointed out.

He explained that with less water in the river, there would be less oxygen which could cause some species of fish to die. Wong added there could also be more landslides along the riverbanks as the soil structure would be different.

He said it was unlikely that the impoundment of the dam would stop because it would incur a loss of RM330,000 per day to do so.

The low water level is also a cause for concern for the RV Orient Pandaw, the only cruise ship here.

“If the dry weather continues, I am worried our ship would have difficulties navigating near the Pelagus rapids,” the ship’s purser Neville Joseph said, adding that October to December were peak seasons with an average of 40 passengers per trip.

Durin vegetable farmer Kong Chiek Wak is worried the prolonged dry weather will seriously affect his vegetables.

“We only have a small water pump. It would be difficult to pump water from the Rajang for farm use if the water level is too low,” Kong explained.

The low water level will also affect the transportation of logs by barges and cargo boats from Kapit-Baleh areas to the sawmills in Sibu or for export through Tanjung Manis.

Sibu Water Board general manager Daniel Wong said he was monitoring the situation closely.

“The water supply in Sibu is normal and there is no cause for alarm now,” he said.

At about 4.30pm yesterday, heavy rain fell for about an hour on Sibu after a dry week.

Seven-month flooding of the 205m-deep Bakun reservoir begins

By STEPHEN THEN
stephenthen@thestar.com.my

Photos by ZULAZHAR SHEBLEE

AN EERIE silence has descended on the Bakun Valley in central Sarawak following the impoundment of the Bakun Dam starting last Wednesday.

StarMetro visited the site 24 hours after the flooding start

ed and found it deserted.

The more than 4,000 workers who laboured at the site during the height of the dam’s construction from 1996 to this year have left. So have the hundreds of trucks, excavators, shovels, four-wheel drives and drilling and blasting machinery.

Gush: Water released from a diversion tunnel at the dam.

Many have been transported to the Murum Valley, 70km in

land for the construction of the Murum Dam.

The housing quarters in Bakun built by dam developer and manager Sarawak Hidro were also deserted except for several bungalows occupied by the engineers and site manag

ers overseeing the flooding of the reservoir.

They will be there for the next seven months or so until the 205m-high dam

is completely flooded.

New fate: The dried up downstream of Sungai Balui caused by the impoundment.

Once the water is at the 195m mark, the turbines can be tested.

When this is successfully done and electricity generation starts, only a handful of technical staff will be left in Bakun.

“All these areas will be flooded,” said Sarawak Hidro managing director and chief engineer Zulkifle Osman while sweeping his hands across the Bakun Valley from a high vantage point.

“Not many of us (Sarawak Hidro staff) are left. The physical construction is completed except for a few finishing touches.”

Sad moment: Akid Lopeng (right) and her daughter Akid Sidek reminiscing over the dried up downstream of Sungai Balui caused by the impoundment of the Bakum dam.

The Balui River, on which the dam is sited, is rising after the river diversion tunnels were closed last Wednesday.

Bakun folk and Sarawak Hidro are in the process of saving priceless ancestral heritage and rare flora and fauna.

Denis Hang Bilang, the Bakun joint committee secretary for Lepuun, Lebu Kulit, Uma Bakah, Uma Lesung and Uma Balui Ukap, said last Wednesday that Zulkifle had agreed that Sarawak Hidro would liaise with Sarawak Museum to salvage ancestral heritage ranging from burial remains to monuments of warriors from ancient times.

“Sarawak Hidro will also build a jetty and a rest house for our use and will forward our remaining grouses on compensation and land claims to the Prime Minister,” he added.

Source: The Star

URL: http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=%2F2010%2F10%2F19%2Fsarawak%2F7245601&sec=sarawak

Bian offers free legal service to logjam victims

14 October 2010

By Joseph Tawie

KUCHING: PKR leader and activist lawyer Baru Bian has offered free legal service to any person or group wanting to sue Sarawak authorities and logging companies over what has been called an “ecological disaster” affecting the rivers Rajang and Baleh.

Referring to the clogging of the rivers by logs and debris, he said:

“The logjam is evidence of a failed forest or environmental policy in Sarawak. I believe anybody affected by the disaster can take legal action. I am prepared to take such action on behalf of such people on a pro bono basis.”

Bian is a well-known native customary rights (NCR) land lawyer and chairman of PKR Sarawak.

The logjam started last week with massive amounts of logs and wood debris drifting down the Rajang for about 250km, stretching from Ulu Baleh to Sibu and disrupting river communication between several towns.

It killed tonnes of fish, including Sarawak’s famous empurau, which costs about RM500 per kilo on the market.

In Kapit, scores of longhouse chiefs expressed anger at loggers who have been operating at Ulu Baleh. They alleged that it was uncontrolled logging that had caused the debris.

They are demanding compensation.

“We have lost our livelihood, especially after the death of fish at Sungai Baleh,” said one of the chiefs. “It is very difficult to catch any fish now.”

Uncontrolled logging

Fish is the source of both food and income for many people in the affected areas.

Sarawak Land Minister James Masing on Tuesday flew over the mountains of Ulu Malatai in Ulu Baleh and said the logjam was caused by landslides and soil erosion resulting from uncontrolled logging.

He said the place resembled a “war zone”.

"Landslides and soil erosions have destroyed at least three hills in the area,” a news report quoted him as saying.

"The affected area is so big that it took 10 minutes of flying time for the helicopter to reach the other end.

"You could see exposed rocks after the landslides and erosions. There is no doubt that excessive logging caused the landslides and erosions.

"The landslides and erosions must have blocked the rivers, creating a temporary dam."

When the dam burst, he added, it released large volumes of water, logs and driftwood into Sungai Baleh, Sungai Balui and Sungai Rejang.

Source: Free Malaysia Today
URL: http://www.freemalaysiatoday.com/fmt-english/politics/sabah-and-sarawak/11537-bian-offers-free-legal-service-to-logjam-victims

‘Logjam a man-made disaster’

14 October 2010

KAPIT: Land Development Minister Dato Sri Dr James Jemut Masing has declared the recent logjam that clogged the Baleh and Rajang rivers a “man-made disaster”.

Masing warns of more such river destructions if uncontrolled logging unchecked

He said ecological devastation at Ulu Melatai, one of the tributaries of Baleh River, could be the main contributor to last week’s disaster.

However, the Baleh assemblyman said the Baleh River’s other tributaries could also have contributed to the devastation.

Baleh River has at least 10 tributaries similar to Ulu Melatai, such as Seranai and Entuloh.

“It is a man-made ecological disaster. It created a mud pool, which completely wiped out the flora and fauna in the area. This includes animals and fish,” Masing told The Borneo Post after a site visit to Ulu Melatai yesterday.

Ulu Melatai is located some 100km southeast of Kapit town and is very close to the Kalimantan border.

With Masing were political secretary to the Chief Minister Angeline Umis, Kapit District Officer Simon Japut Tiok and Kapit district councillor Tan Kian Hoo.

Masing attributed the devastation at Ulu Melatai to extensive logging with little or no control by the authorities.

“It is as if the loggers are in a hurry to clear the whole area above the proposed Baleh hydroelectric power dam, which is currently under feasibility studies,” he said.

He warned that more similar incidents could happen again if such manner of logging was allowed to continue.

Besides, he said, the soil along the Baleh tributaries was loose and heavily churned up by logging activities, which could easily turn into mudslides by prolonged heavy rain.

While the government’s policy on forest management was very clear, he said, greater implementation and enforcement were needed.

“I would like to urge the big boys to stop sub-contracting the jobs to others to prevent illegal logging and gangsterism in the area,” he said, adding that no such incident occurred when large companies operated in the area over the last three decades.

He added that this was the third such incident to happen at Baleh River, causing havoc to the local community.

The first was recorded in 2008 at Sg Ga’at, while last year a similar incident happened at Sg Tutoh.

According to him, the upper reaches of Baleh River are a very hilly and rugged terrain, making logging very dangerous. In a related incident, two people reportedly died in that area when the bridge was swept by the mudslide.

Both bodies have been found.

Source: Borneo Post Online

URL: http://www.theborneopost.com/?p=68502

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

SCANE condemns governments for allowing water impoundment for Bakun dam

13 October 2010

Miri: Sarawak Conservation Alliance for Natural Environment (SCANE) condemns both the Federal government of Malaysia and the Sarawak State government action for permitting the Sarawak Hidro Sdn Bhd to proceed with its water impoundment for Bakun Hydroelectric dam without having any Emergency Rescue Plan (ERP) to encounter any eventualities of environmental disasters due to dam failure.

SCANE has been informed that Sarawak Hidro will start with the water impoundment for the dam as early as from today onward. On Monday, a tragedy happened at the dam site where a long boat was capsized and a man has been reported still missing.

Once again, SCANE warns the Sarawak Hidro Sdn Bhd not to start but stop immediately the act of impounding water for Bakun dam by having failure of coming up with any Emergency Rescue Plan (ERP) that guarantees the safety of the communities living downstream of the dam. The government (s) and the Sarawak Hidro should not too hastily to close the river diversion tunnels to impound water for the dam until the ERP have been drawn and the public at large are well informed of the plan and that all precautionary measures are ready in place and operational.

Prior to the water impoundment for the dam, the communities downstream and public at large should be adequately and extensive informed of the adverse impacts of the dam as erecting of monstrous project like Bakun dam could entail consequences, some of which might not have been foreseen. SCANE fears that the impoundment of the dam may cause environmental disorders that would eventually trigger earthquakes, landslides and floods.

SCANE condemns the hasty act of dam impoundment and calls upon the Government and Sarawak Hidro to put in place the security and emergency plan prior to the water impoundment process for Bakun dam rather than just totally overlooked these matters and simply gambles with nature, human safety and security aspects of the dam.

30-Mile Logjam on Malaysian River Hints at Forest Crimes

October 12, 2010

By ANDREW C. REVKIN, The New York Times

It’s hardly news that the rich virgin rain forests on both the Malaysian and Indonesian sides of Borneo are being steadily sheared away, enriching a few while ravaging unique ecosystems. In fact, it’s such a persistent issue that headlines are rare.

But a 30-mile-long logjam created on Malaysia’s longest river after a heavy rainstorm last week has brought new focus to the issue, and new questions about whether the government official who runs just about everything on Sarawak, the Malaysian portion of the island, is abetting — and profiting from — an unfolding environmental disaster.

Contrast what you see in the video above, shot late last week along the Rajang River, with the gushy greenwash published by the state government on its forestry Web site:

Welcome to SARAWAK FORESTRY, and the unique vision we are planning to achieve — global recognition as the leader in tropical forest conservation and products. We are entrusted to safeguard and sustainably manage the amazing biodiversity in Sarawak’s forests — covering tens of thousands of species of animals, plants, fungi and other life forms…. Our children, our grandchildren and future generations will recognize our successful stewardship of the natural environment and its conservation.

Personally, I’m not reassured. I’m seeking a reaction from the State Department, which has made tropical forest conservation a priority under both the Obama and Bush administrations, but of course is also juggling other issues — including working with Malaysia to deter terrorism by Islamic extremists. The Sarawak government may be seeking global recognition for its sustainable forestry practices, but it would deserve global condemnation if the roots of the logjam lie in destructive, and state sponsored, logging practices.

Mike Shanahan has helpfully pulled together links to local coverage of the situation in a post at his Under the Banyan blog. Here’s a short excerpt and link to the rest:

Environment and Public Health Minister Wong Soon Koh declared the log-jam to be a “natural calamity of gigantic proportion” and blamed landslides in highland logging areas. He said: “The wooden debris which was swept away could have been accumulated there for the past 40 or more years.”

But he added that if there was evidence that human activities were to blame, “stern action will be taken against the perpetrators”. Land Development Minister James Masing blamed unscrupulous timber companies and said that whoever caused the problem should be punished.

But many local bloggers accuse these politicians of hypocrisy. They are frustrated with the decades of government policies that have enriched a powerful elite with logging dollars but have left Sarawak with just ten percent of its forest intact.

One blogger called Tbsbidayuh summed up the mood when he wrote: “Thank you to the monsoon rain for revealing state government ignorance on taking care of environment.” Read the rest.

I also encourage you to read some impressive investigative reporting in the Sarawak Report on real estate dealings of Abdul Taib Mahmud, the Sarawak official who for decades has been in charge of handing out logging permits. The newspaper, in describing Mahmud’s involvement in substantial family real estate holdings in Canada, asks a simple question:

The Preston Square development lies at the centre of the major Canadian property empire run by the developer Sakto, which was founded in the early 1980s by Taib’s college-aged son Mahmud Abu Bekir Taib, his daughter Jamilah and his brother Onn Mahmud. It continues to be managed as a ‘family business’ by his now son-in-law, a Canadian, Sean Murray.

Taxpayers in Sarawak are entitled to ask how the Chief Minister’s modest 20,000 Malaysian Ringgit a month official salary [$77,000 a year] has managed to help generate a property empire worth so much. It is also well known that the Taib family own further considerable assets in Malaysia and elsewhere.

It’d be great to know the answer, and also to be sure that countries concerned about conserving tropical forests press for an honest investigation into the conditions that resulted in the great river logjam.

If you want to track the situation on the Rajang River and in Sarawak’s forests, check the Sarawak Headhunter and Hornbill Unleashed blogs.

Malaysia’s million dollar question — where did the logs come from?

11 October 2010

The 50-km long log-jam that blocked Malaysia’s biggest river shows the scale of deforestation in the highlands of Borneo and raises fresh concerns about how the state of Sarawak manages its natural resources.

This is Malaysia’s mighty Rajang River as it has never been seen before, choked from side to side — for kilometre after kilometre — by thousands upon thousands of dead trees.

Read more here: http://underthebanyan.wordpress.com/2010/10/11/malaysias-million-dollar-question-where-did-the-logs-come-from/

Source: Under The Banyan

Ecological havoc: State govt panned

12 October 2010

By Joseph Tawie


KUCHING: Sarawak PKR today slammed the state government for its failure to prevent an “ecological disaster” when timber mass and debris clogged the Rajang River for the past five days.

“Its failure to contain the problem shows poor governance and incompetence in dealing with the consequences of developments.

“Sarawakians will suffer greater losses in terms of socio-economic costs and ecological damage,” PKR information chief See Chee How said.

“After five days, the state government is still in the dark as to its root cause,” said See, pointing out that whenever it rains in the upper reaches of major rivers, floods are reported in towns along and at the lower reaches of the rivers.

See was commenting on the massive logjam caused when tonnes of logs and wood debris drifted down the Rajang River for about 250km, stretching from Ulu Baleh to Sibu.

As a result, river communication by express boats was disrupted between Sibu and other towns such as Kanowit, Song and Kapit.

Tonnes of dead fish such as Sarawak’s famous fish empurau which cost about RM500 per kilo have been found floating in the river.

“I agree with (Land Development Minister) James Masing that this is an ecological disaster,” See said.

“I feel constrained to agree with Masing when he urged the state government not to take an ‘ostrich’ approach,” See said, adding that Masing’s call to his cabinet colleagues to take stern action was quite “bizarre”.

“It is certainly weird when he asked the state government not to adopt an ostrich approach (in tackling the problem). However, I would also like to call on Masing to keep his head above the sand and tell us what he has done in the Cabinet.

“This is the third ecological havoc which has seriously affected the livelihood of the people in Baleh,” he said.

The first disaster was at Ga’at in 2008 and the second at Sungai Tunoh last year.

Uncontrolled logging

Furthermore, See said, the state disaster and relief management committee had stated that the massive flow of log and timber mass and debris “was believed to have originated from Putai and Nungan in the upper reaches of Baleh River”.

As state assemblyman for Baleh, Masing, who is also Parti Rakyat Sarawak president, should not just point fingers at others, he added.

“However, he is not the minister who issued timber concession licences for the indiscriminate logging in Ulu Baleh, which had caused tonnes of timber mass and enormous debris to flow down the Rajang River.

“At least, it is now clear who Masing was referring to as an ostrich. No wonder he sounded angry, yet helpless, even though he is in his Cabinet,” he said.

Meanwhile, Masing said that whoever caused the massive logjam in the Rajang River should be punished.

He said blamed the disaster on uncontrolled logging in the upper reaches of Baleh River.

He urged the relevant authorities to investigate the matter and make the culprits accountable.

“This is an ecological disaster. The mud has killed fish in the rivers for over 100km.

“The government cannot be an ostrich on this issue. My people have suffered so much from this incident,” he added.

Source: Free Malaysia Today
URL: http://www.freemalaysiatoday.com/fmt-english/politics/pakatan-rakyat/11425-ecological-havoc-state-govt-panned

Bakun Dam ‘is an economic rip-off’

October 11, 2010
By Joseph Tawie

The construction of the Bakun and seven other dams plus the coal-fired power plants are economic rip-offs – they are Sarawak’s own get-rich-quick schemes.

“The massive sums involved in building these large dams would certainly guarantee handsome profits for the privileged project proponents,” said See Chee How, Sarawak PKR information chief.

“This is not development for Sarawak, but an economic rip-off. Sarawak-owned get-rich-quick schemes have exhausted our timber resources.

“Almost all our agricultural land have been leased out,” he said when commenting on the astronomical costs of constructing the Bakun Dam.

PKR, he said, wants the government to set up a Royal Commission of Inquiry or a Parliamentary Commission of Inquiry to find out the final costs of the Bakun hydro-electric project and where the money has gone to.

“The commission should also re-examine the cost-benefit analysis and the economic viability of the Bakun project,” said See.

See added that the original cost was estimated at RM3.95 billion in 1983 and RM4.09 billion in 1985. With cost overruns and compensation for delays and interests, the final tag is believed to have escalated to RM15 billion today.

“But Malaysians have been kept in the dark as to the final costs and where the substantial additional sums have gone to,” he said.

India’s experience

“Even with the cost now estimated by the federal government at RM7.3 billion, double the original estimate, there is a need to re-examine the cost benefit analysis and the economic viability of the Bakun project” said See.

“It must be borne in mind that only one out of the originally planned eight hydro turbines will be commissioned next year, reducing its power generating capacity from 2,400MW to 300MW.

“Take India’s experience: it has more than 3,000 dams but 60% of them are economically non-viable financial disasters because they are not able to recoup their investments.”

“The Sarawak BN government owes all Sarawakians an explanation. We want Second Planning and Resource Management Minister Awang Tengah Ali Hassan to give us his reason for saying that the Bakun Dam is not a white elephant.

“Sarawakians have paid their share of the cost of the RM15-billion project and we now have to fork out another RM7 billion to buy the federal project,” he said.

“What is the actual cost to all Sarawakians? We have not included the socio-economic and environmental costs which all Sarawakians have to bear.

“Bakun was originally projected to generate 2,400MW power. If the state government is convinced that Bakun is economically viable, Sarawakians should be convinced that it can generate the 2,400MW power.

“Otherwise, what is the justification for the seven new dams and more coal-fired power plants?” he asked.

Source: Hornbill Unleashed

URL: http://hornbillunleashed.wordpress.com/2010/10/11/10544/

50km logjam on the Rajang river

By PHILIP HII
philiphii@thestar.com.my

Saturday October 9, 2010

SIBU: Logs and debris, stretching for 50km on the Rajang river, reached Sibu town at about 10am yesterday leaving many people shocked by the scale of what is turning out to be an environmental disaster.

“This is unprecedented and beyond imagination,” Environment and Public Health Minister Datuk Seri Wong Soon Koh said after assessing the situation at the Express Passenger Boat Terminal in the morning.

According to a statement from the Natural Resources and Environment Board, the source of these logs and debris were from the Baleh River and its tributaries above Kapit.

Several days of heavy rain earlier this week in Putai and Nu­­ngun in upper Baleh had caused a massive landslide which brought down the logs and debris into the rivers. The high water level and swift current in Baleh River and its tributaries also washed the logs and debris along their banks.

Passage hindered: An express passenger boat trying to weave its way through the logs in the Rajang river as it leaves Sibu.

Wong said it was a serious natural disaster which had caught both the public and government off guard.

“We haven’t started to calculate the amount of losses and the damage caused,” he said, adding that once the logs and debris had made their way out of Sibu, the authorities would start to check the foundation of the Durin and Lanang bridges.

It was estimated by a sawmill manager that the volume of the logs and debris would be more than 300,000m3.

The situation was worse around noon when the whole area at the confluence of the Rajang and Igan rivers was completely logjammed. Most of the logs and debris flowed down the Rajang while some of them flowed to the Igan.

The map explains the events leading up to the logjam.

The Malay villages which were built on stilts on the right bank of the Igan were fortunate to escape calamity as the logs and debris flowed near the opposite bank.

Meanwhile, Land Development Minister Datuk Seri James Masing blamed unscrupulous timber companies for the disaster. He travelled up the river to Kapit yesterday and was disturbed by what he saw.

“There is still a lot of debris, making travel unsafe. There are also dead fish in the river. It’s an ecological disaster,” Masing, the Baleh assemblyman, told The Star.

He said that this was the third time in three years – the first was in 2008 at Sungai Gat and the second in Sungai Tunoh last year – that such an incident had happened and he feared that it would have far-reaching implications on the state, particularly on the timber industry.

He said the state government had laid down rules for logging but what was happening clearly showed that the rules were not being followed.

“I have gone around the world telling people that we are doing logging correctly. Now this happens. What will people think of us? We must take action against these unscrupulous timber companies.”

He said the authorities concerned must take their job more seriously and enforce the laws stringently.

Source: The Star

URL: http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2010/10/9/nation/7192940&sec=nation

Log-jammed river disaster unfolding in Sarawak – Now in Sibu !

By HU Editor

(Updated with Video) This is outrageous and disastrous. Will the state government spend astronomical sums of Sarawakians’ money to clear up the mess or just let the rotting logs flow into the South China Sea? Will the culprits be prosecuted?

The Chief Minister, in charge of issuing logging licences for the last 30 years (and indiscriminate destruction of our forests) should be held responsible.

Read more here: http://hornbillunleashed.wordpress.com/2010/10/08/log-jammed-river-disaster-unfolding-in-sarawak-now-in-sibu/

Source: Hornbill Unleashed

Taib’s massive headache….. He deserves it!

By HU Editor

( Video Inside )This is outrageous and disastrous. Will the state government spend astronomical sums of Sarawakians’ money to clear up the mess or just let the rotting logs flow into the South China Sea? Will the culprits be prosecuted?

The Chief Minister, in charge of issuing logging licences for the last 30 years (and indiscriminate destruction of our forests), should be held responsible.

Read more here: http://hornbillunleashed.wordpress.com/2010/10/08/10352/

Source: Hornbill Unleashed

Malaysia log-jam threatens disaster in Sarawak

Logs and wood debris flowing down a river in Malaysia have blocked river transport and are threatening major flooding downstream.

The town of Kapit on the Rajang River in Sarawak has already been cut off, state media reported.

Heavy rains have forced millions of cut logs at a timber depot into the river.

The combination of a heavy monsoon season with extensive logging, both legal and illegal, is creating a dangerous situation, local media said.

A major environmental disaster was unfolding in Sarawak, which is heavily forested and logged, The Star newspaper reported.

Fear

The newspaper said heavy rains are believed to have caused a flood at a logging camp on the upper reaches of Balleh River - a tributary of the Rajang - prompting the surge of large logs into the river.

The paper quoted a local businessman as saying that the events were unprecedented.

A Sarawak blog, Hornbill Unleashed, carried pictures of the log jam and demanded action from the government for better infrastructure in the state.

"The chief minister who is in charge of issuing logging licences for the last 30 years should be held responsible," says Hornbill Unleashed in its posting.

The river is the only means of transport for communities in the area and residents further downstream are writing blog and twitter entries expressing fear at what might happen when the log train reaches them.

Source: BBC News Asia-Pacific

URL: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-11498660

Rajang River Still Innavigable Due to Massive Floating Debris

Friday, 08 October 2010 15:27
Last updated on Friday, 08 October 2010 15:32

SIBU, 8 OCTOBER, 2010: The Sarawak government will conduct a thorough investigation into the alarming situation where long stretches of debris floating on the Rajang River has rendered it innavigable to all boats here today.

"We need to find out the causes, but if there are evidence to indicate that it is due to human factor, stern action will be taken against the perpetrators," said State Minister of Environment and Public Health Datuk Seri Wong Soon Koh.

The country's longest river, the Rajang at 563 kilometres long from its source, was innavigable to all boats, big or small, from about noon, here, today.

The river was like a conveyor belt in a sawmill but instead of transporting uniformly cut wood, it carried an endless flow of uprooted trees, discarded logs and all manner of vegetative debris from Kapit, some 176km away.

Kapit experienced an alarming situation from about 2pm yesterday.

Wong who watched the scene from the Kapit Express Boat Terminal, described the situation as a "natural calamity of gigantic proportion".

"I was told in Kapit yesterday that the debris was about 50km long. It is still continuing in Kapit today although happening in smaller portions and length," he told reporters at the scene.

Wong said he had been told that there had been massive landslides in Putai and Nungun, which are logging concession areas in Balleh in the interiors of Kapit Divison due to heavy rain a few days ago.

But he said he was still waiting for detailed reports from the state Natural Resources and Environment Ministry.

Wong said the situation had never been seen or experienced here before and was rather scary.

"When the situation improves and there is a navigable path along the river, teams from the Public Works Department and Sarawak Rivers Board will check on the Durin and Lanang bridges to dislodge any debris that might have been trapped at their foundations in the river.

Meanwhile, express boats and other vessels leaving on afternoon trips to Kapit had to delay their trips.

Those who left this morning, had to stop somewhere safe along the route.

-- Bernama

Source: Malaysiandigest.com

URL: http://112.137.167.193/news/36-local/9739-rajang-river-still-innavigable-due-to-massive-floating-debris.html

River disaster hits Sarawak

By PHILIP HII
philiphii@thestar.com

SIBU: A major environmental disaster is unfolding in the state, as kilometre after kilometre of logs and wood debris flow down the Rajang.

It was believed that heavy rain in the upper reaches of Balleh River – a tributary of the Rajang – had caused landslides at log ponds of a major timber camp and brought down the logs and wood debris.

Kapit businessman Tay Hock Joo, who telephoned The Star in Sibu yesterday evening, said nobody in Kapit had ever seen such an occurrence before.

He said the residents first noticed the debris at about 1pm.

Environmental catastrophe: Tonnes of logs and wood debris drifting down the mighty Rajang River near Kapit Thursday, temporarily trapping a ferry and its passengers.

River transport was cut off when logs and debris started filling the entire width of the river by 4pm.

At 7.30pm, the debris was reported to have reached Song and was expected to hit Sibu early in the morning.

Sibu residents are worried by the extent of damage the logs and wood debris would cause to their properties such as jetties and boats.

“We are also worried whether the foundation of the Durin and Lanang bridges are strong enough to withstand the pressure,” said Sibu resident Simon Ting.

Meanwhile, several government officials said the authorities were unprepared for such an incident as it had never happened before and they also did not have the capacity to stop the wood from flowing downstream towards Sibu.

Source: The Star
URL: http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=%2F2010%2F10%2F8%2Fnation%2F7186693&sec=nation

Stop water impoundment prior to the Emergency Rescue Plan (ERP) for Bakun Dam make available to public

Miri (8 October 2010): Sarawak Conservation Alliance for Natural Environment (SCANE) calls upon the government, if any, the Emergency Rescue Plan (ERP) for Bakun dam be made public prior to action of impounding water for Bakun Dam.

SCANE warns the Sarawak Hidro Sdn Bhd not proceed with its flooding trial run for Bakun dam until an Emergency Rescue Plan (ERP) has been in place and the public at large have been adequately informed of the procedures laid down by the plan.

SCANE is deeply concerned with the safety and adverse impacts of the dam to the riverine communities living downstream and upstream of the dam. The downstream communities include the people of numerous longhouses along Rajang River who live directly below the dam and the residents of the Belaga township as well as other major towns such as Kapit, Song, Kanowit and Sibu. Within the impounding area, there are more than 100 native families living upstream, that is the Bakun dam’s reservoir and catchment area.

The Bakun dam, Malaysia's largest hydroelectric dam, is located on the Balui River in the upper Rejang River basin, some 37km upstream from Belaga township. Sarawak Hidro Sdn Bhd – a wholly owned subsidiary of the Ministry of Finance Incorporated is the owner and developer of the dam.

To this day, the government and the authorities concerns have yet to announce any plan that would take into account the environmental catastrophe consequences of Bakun dam on downstream communities. So far, there has been no preparation on the part of the authorities to design relevant action plans that are able to address the problems that may arise downstream in the immediate future, as a result of the water impoundment of Balui River by the dam.

SCANE is aware of the existence of an Emergency Rescue Plan (ERP), which has been drawn up to prepare the concerned areas for the possible occurrence of dam failure, however this ERP is already too outdated as it has been designed more than ten (10) years ago. Therefore, it is premature action of the government and the dam developer(s) to impound water for the dam if new ERP is non-existent.

In any action of river impoundment that created large man-made lake by large dam like Bakun, it will cause environmental disorder that may lead to an unstable ecosystem which impacts would be disastrous and far reaching to human beings, wildlife and natural environment in the area.

As experience had shown in other parts of the world where similar large dams were built, many communities living along the downstream terrains of large dams have had to face grave dangers and suffer economic losses as a result of the construction of the dams.

In Belaga District, as well as those downstream communities, considering their vulnerable location, which is positioned exactly downstream of the dam, it is only natural that they harbour anxiety about the possibility of the dam suffering from any form of structural or functional failure for such a misfortune would surely result in huge financial losses and pose a threat to their safety and lives.

Meantime, while the ERP is yet to be drawn up, the Government (both State and Federal) should immediately resolve some of the distressing issues pertaining to the to the effects of the Bakun Hydroelectric Dam on the communities living upstream and downstream with regards to outstanding compensation on lands and properties and the resettlement of villages to new sites as well as adverse water pollution and river navigation problems to downstream communities.

Therefore, SCANE strongly calls upon the Government and Sarawak Hidro to immediately stop the plan of impounding Balui River, and demand that:

1. The Government to comprehensively disseminate information on the content of the Emergency Rescue Plan (EPR) of the Bakun Hydroelectric Project to the people residing downstream of the dam.

2. Memorandum of undertaking to be signed and issued to the downstream riverine communities to guarantee that in the event of any incidence of dam failure or damage, the Government or the project developer will be held accountable for the destruction and loss of properties and the suffering inflicted onto the communities.

This means that in the event of such an incidence, the Government or developer will bear the responsibility to pay adequate monetary compensation to the affected residents.

SCANE also urges the Government to carry out comprehensive and meaningful consultation process with the downstream communities with regards to the ERP.

Press Release and Statement Issued By:

Raymond Abin,

The National Coordinator

Sarawak Conservation Alliance for Natural Environment (SCANE)

Tel: +60138449345

Native folk protest against Baram Dam in Borneo

By: STEPHEN THEN

30 Sept 2010

MIRI: Native folk in ulu Baram in northern Sarawak want the proposed Baram Dam to be scrapped as Sarawak was already acquiring the Bakun Dam.

They are alarmed over the move by Sarawak authorities to start clearing land to construct a highway to facilitate the construction of the proposed 1,000 Mws Baram Dam, about 200kms inland from Miri.

They have formed a ''Baram Protection Action Committee'' to lobby for the proposed Baram Dam to be aborted and are appealing to Prime Minister Datuk Seri Mohd Najib Tun Razak and Chief Minister Tan Sri Abdul Taib Mahmud to assure Baram folk that the dam construction would not proceed.

They said that since the Sarawak government would be buying the 2,400 MWs Bakun Dam from the Federal Government, there was no reason for any more dams to be built in Sarawak.

They have launched a campaign to gather 20,000 signatures to be submitted with a memorandum of appeal to the two leaders, saying that the Baram Dam had not even gone through the Social Impact Assessment and Environmental Impact Assessment stage.

Baram Protection Action Committee chairman Philip Jau came to Miri on Thursday with several community leaders and said that 3,000 Baram folks had already signed the appeal.

Jau, who is from Long Laput, said the Baram folk have seen increased movement of outsiders into ulu Baram in recent months for land clearing works.

''They came into sites near our longhouses and started to clear plots of land belonging to us. When we asked them who they were and where they were from, they said they were from Kuching.

''They said they were hired by the state government to survey the land slotted to be cleared for the building of a highway into Long Keseh where the Baram Dam is to be constructed.

''How can they start this sort of ground work when we people in Baram have not even agreed to the construction of the Baram Dam?

''The EIA and the SIA for the Baram Dam have not even been compiled. We are very worried about what is happening in Baram now,'' he told a press conference.

Jau came to meet Sarawak Natives Customary Rights Land Network chairman Romuald Siew, Sarawak Coalition for Natural Environment chairman Raymond Abin, and lawyer and former Baram MP Harrison Ngau, to seek legal advice.

Siew said that there was no urgency for yet another dam in Sarawak.

''Bakun Dam and Murum Dam will produce 3,300 MWs of electricity. Together with the other existing dams in the state now, there would be a big surplus of power, '' he said.

Siew appealed to the Federal Government to persuade the Sarawak government not to proceed with any more dam constructions.

Parti Pesaka Bumiputra Bersatu (PBB) Youth chief for the Telang Usan state constituency, Dennis Ngau, confirmed that the Sarawak Land and Survey Department had deployed workers into ulu Baram to start ground survey on the Baram Dam.

''The surveys on the road access to the proposed Baram Dam have started, but the actual dam project is still in the planning stage.

''The Baram Dam construction has not begun. It will come much later and the Baram folks will be consulted on whatever is happening.

''PBB wants the Baram Dam to benefit the local natives. We will be holding more dialogues with the people of Baram to alleviate their fears,'' he stressed.

Asked if this meant the construction for the Baram Dam was already approved, he said the state government had already agreed in principle that the Baram Dam would be built, but it had not fixed any date for the actual construction to begin.

Source: The Star

URL: http://www.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=%2F2010%2F9%2F30%2Fnation%2F20100930160423&sec=nation