Support Indigenous forest protection in Borneo

by The Borneo Project
Support Indigenous forest protection in Borneo
Support Indigenous forest protection in Borneo
Support Indigenous forest protection in Borneo
Support Indigenous forest protection in Borneo
Support Indigenous forest protection in Borneo
Support Indigenous forest protection in Borneo
Support Indigenous forest protection in Borneo
Support Indigenous forest protection in Borneo
Support Indigenous forest protection in Borneo
Support Indigenous forest protection in Borneo

Project Report | May 18, 2022
Indigenous delegation from Sarawak visits Europe!

By Jettie Word | Director

This month, an Indigenous delegation from Sarawak toured Europe to raise awareness about the shortcomings of the Malaysian Timber Certification Scheme. Our local partner SAVE Rivers and local communities have been opposing logging concessions operated by timber giant Samling, many of which are certified under the scheme. The communities attempted multiple times to engage in dialogue, and filed an official complaint. Instead of engaging in a dialogue process, Samling filed a defamation lawsuit against SAVE Rivers.

In the first week of May, our delegation attended an anti SLAPP conference in Zurich, where international experts agreed that the case against SAVE Rivers is SLAPP (strategic litigation against public participation). Clare Rewcastle, editor of the Sarawak Report who exposed the 1MDB scandal and who has faced countless legal threats, labeled the Samling SLAPP suit against SAVE Rivers as an example of “a powerful company targeting Indigenous people, some of the most vulnerable and poor people in the world.” Read more here.

Last week, the delegation spoke with the Dutch government about suspending its endorsement of the Malaysian Timber Certification Scheme. The Dutch government signaled its interest in starting a review of the scheme in response to the delegation’s serious concerns and experiences with MTCS.

The Netherlands is the number one importer of MTCS certified timber: 28% of the total export volume of MTCS timber went to the Netherlands in 2020. Laki Weng from the Penan village of Long Adang, said "I am very happy to see that the Dutch government is willing to meet us and to listen to us. In Malaysia, our concerns are not considered serious enough, we would never get the chance to present them to the government.” Read more here.

We hope these efforts have been fruitful and that the Malaysian timber certification body will take notice and remedy the situation.

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Organization Information

The Borneo Project

Location: Berkeley, CA - USA
Facebook: Facebook Page
Twitter: @borneoaction
Project Leader:
Jettie Word
Berkeley , CA United States
$10,559 raised of $35,000 goal
 
147 donations
$24,441 to go
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