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Destruction Of Indonesian Forests Poses Global Threat 

The lowland forests of the Sunda Shelf in Indonesia, the richest forests on Earth and 
home to the Sumatran rhino, the Sumatran tiger and the Asian elephant, could be 
totally destroyed within ten years.
That destruction is threatened by mafia-like logging gangs who systematically ignore 
the protocols laid down by the Indonesian State Forestry Department. 

This is the conclusion of four leading conservationists writing in today's issue of 
Science. 

Indonesia is currently a society in transition, torn apart by political and economic 
crises. While the country officially endorses sustainable forest management, in 
practice, illegal logging gangs operate within forestlands that overlap official park 
boundaries, backed by army and rebel groups. 

Government officials who attempt to stop illegal logging practice face serious 
intimidation, which includes arson and even murder, while many of the local 
communities that live on the land have signed away their rights to it to the loggers, 
both for immediate cash benefit and to avoid retribution from logging gangs.

The authors, all of whom have lived and worked in Indonesia for more than a decade, 
estimate that the illegal logging will vastly increase the risk and impacts of fire 
during the next El Niņo event; forest degradation and land clearance were the root 
causes of the 1998-99 fire disaster that blanketed nearly 20 million people across 
Southeast Asia in smoke for months, with disastrous consequences for local health. 

They also believe that continued deforestation will result in severe flooding; in 
October, districts surrounding one of the national parks where logging has been taking 
place suffered major flooding that led to deaths, the destruction of roads and crops, 
and caused local food shortages.

Paul Jepson, senior author of the article and a researcher at Oxford's School of 
Geography, said, "The illegal logging in Indonesia is of global significance; not only 
will we lose a number of endangered species through the destruction of their habitat, 
but the loss of the forests will also have an impact on global warming and on climate 
conditions not just in Indonesia, but across the world. 

"We hope that not only the Indonesian government but also donor governments, industry, 
the scientific community and the conservation movement will unite in the face of the 
unprecedented forest loss to take positive action to protect Indonesia's forests." 

18-May-2001


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