A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, August 24, 2018
To win Indonesian hearts, Jokowi and Prabowo must protect Mother Nature
Indonesia is home to the world's third-largest span of tropical
rainforest. Who wins the country's presidency next year will determine
the fate of these forests' occupants, such as the endangered orangutan.
Source: Shutterstock

PRESIDENTIAL candidates in Indonesia, home to the world’s third-largest
span of tropical rainforest, will have to address the issues of
environmental protection and management in upcoming debates, according
to a top election official.
Some 195 million people are eligible to vote in next year’s election
that pits President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo against his challenger from the
2014 ballot, Prabowo Subianto.
While the economy, religion and social welfare typically dominate
campaign platforms and talking points in Indonesia, the country’s
General Elections Commission, or KPU, says it will also make room for
environmental issues.
“One of the main topics for the presidential debates is environmental issues,” KPU commissioner Wahyu Setiawan said recently.
“We want to let the people know how exactly a candidate is paying attention to environmental issues.”
Campaigning for the April 17 election kicks off on Oct 13 this year,
with a series of debates scheduled through April 13 next year.
Jokowi, who is seeking a second term in office, last week named the
country’s top Islamic cleric, Mar’uf Amin, as his running mate.
Prabowo, who pushed Jokowi to the tightest presidential election result
in Indonesia’s democratic history four years ago, is running alongside
businessman and Jakarta deputy governor Sandiaga Uno.

A mask portrait of president-elect Joko Widodo (L) and defeated
presidential candidate, ex-general Prabowo Subianto (R) on display
during celebrations in Solo in 2014. Both men will be facing-off for the
2019 presidential elections in Indonesia. Source: Anwar Mustafa/AFP
Jokowi has a degree in forestry management and ran a furniture export business before entering politics. As president, he has rolled out measures to address environmental issues, including forest fires, fisheries, clean energy, indigenous people’s rights, and peatland conservation.
With regards to commodities, the Jokowi administration has further embraced a nationalist policymaking position: lambasting the European Union over ban on palm oil in biofuels, nationalising extractive companies, and forcing local coal miners to allocate much of production for the domestic market.
Mar’uf, in his role as head of the MUI, Indonesia’s highest clerical
council, has also addressed environmental issues before. Under his
chairmanship, the council issued fatwas, or religious edicts,
prohibiting the trafficking of wildlife and the setting of illegal forest fires.
But the MUI’s edicts are not legally binding, and there have been no
assessments on whether they’ve made any impression on the world’s
biggest Muslim population.
Their opponents, meanwhile, have extensive stakes in the extractives and natural resources industries.
Prabowo, a retired special forces commander, has business interests spanning from oil and gas and palm oil, to forestry and mining. He and his brother hold stakes in pulp and paper company PT Kertas Nusantara.
Uno is a major shareholder in the investment holding company PT Saratoga Investama Sedaya,
whose portfolio includes coal miner PT Adaro Energy, palm oil producer
PT Provident Agro, and geothermal plant developer PT Medco Power
Indonesia.
He also previously controlled a stake in water management company PT Aetra Air Jakarta, which he sold after being elected deputy governor in 2017.
Perusakan hutan bisa dicegah dengan keterbukaan informasi data kehutanan seperti HGU, sayangnya Badan Pertanahan Nasional @atr_bpn masih saja menutup data tersebut meski sudah diperintahkan Mahkamah Agung. Hmm.. Ada apa ya?— Greenpeace Indonesia (@GreenpeaceID) 20 August 2018
Tonton video ini dan dukung #BukaInformasiHGU pic.twitter.com/wRqL0dTNN7
Perusakan hutan bisa dicegah dengan keterbukaan informasi data kehutanan seperti HGU, sayangnya Badan Pertanahan Nasional @atr_bpn masih saja menutup data tersebut meski sudah diperintahkan Mahkamah Agung. Hmm.. Ada apa ya?
Tonton video ini dan dukung #BukaInformasiHGU
Some of the key talking points expected from candidates during the
debates include ways to make streamline regulations, beef up law
enforcement, and improve coordination in environmental management
between the central and local governments, said Bob Purba, executive
director of the NGO Forest Watch Indonesia.
He said transparency in land-use data and permit issuance was a crucial topic that needed to be addressed at the debates.
“What we hope to see [from the candidates] is not only promises to solve
these issues, but clear strategies to resolve them,” Purba said.
Corruption by Indonesian politicians, particularly local officials,
often centers on the exploitation of natural resources and land,
Setiawan said, making this issue a key point of concern for the
candidates to address.
“We must pay attention to environmental issues,” he said. “Imagine how
devastating it will be if the elected president has no clear program
about environmental management.”


