Sumber: https://iva.aippnet.org/indonesia-indigenous-dayak-tribe-pitted-against-palm-oil-giant-in-new-film/
Published On Thursday, May 19, 2016 By admin. Under: Indonesia, Multimedia, News, South East Asia Region, Videos. Tags: Land Rights, Livelihood
- The Semunying Jaya community accuses the company of land grabbing and has sued it in West Kalimantan province.
- The case was featured in Indonesia’s national inquiry into land conflicts affecting indigenous peoples.
- Darmex is owned by one of Indonesia’s richest tycoons, Surya Darmadi.

Residents recount the company’s destruction of the rubber trees from which they drew their livelihoods, the forest they held sacred and the cemetery in which they buried their ancestors.
“After they burned our house, my mother and I just wept,” a woman named Fransiska said. “All the memories of the family were there.”
Protests after the company’s 2004 arrival failed to move the authorities, so residents resorted to direct action, seizing heavy equipment. Several community members were thrown in jail as a result, charged with robbery and extortion.
Such “criminalization” of indigenous peoples was common in Indonesia, said Abdon Nababan, secretary general of the Indigenous Peoples Alliance of the Archipelago (AMAN).
“This nation must not let the indigenous peoples remain colonized, still discriminated against, remaining the lowest class of citizens,” he said. “Because if this continues then the greatest threat is not only to indigenous peoples but to our unity as a nation.”

In 2013, Indonesia’s highest court took indigenous peoples’ customary forests out of state forests, opening the door for them to claim millions of hectares of land. But without national legislation explaining how the process should work,implementation across the archipelago has been piecemeal and largely nonexistent.

Darmex is one of the few companies to be kicked out of the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil, the world’s largest association for ethical production of the commodity.
Last year, Darmadi was arrested for bribing the governor of Sumatra’s Riau province. The governor went down, but when it came to Darmadi, the court decided there was not enough evidence to convict.
Source: MongaBay
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