Testimony of Sarwadi,
Indonesian farmer
Sarwadi Sukiman, a small
farmer from Sumatra (Indonesia) is currently sharing his experience
in Poznan
during the United Nations climate talks, as part of the Via Campesina
delegation. His story shows what happens when plans such as REDD
(Reducing
Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation) are implemented and what
impacts
they have on small farmer's lives. REDD is a new mechanism negotiated
in the
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) that
provides
funding to developing countries to protect forests in order to capture
carbon
and stabilise the climate. This carbon trading mechanism is getting a
lot of
international support at the Poznan
conference. However, the real impact of such programmes on peasants and
indigenous peoples is disastrous.
Sarwadi comes from Tanjung
Lebar village in Muara Jambi
regency. In his area, during the eighties, the development of
industrial forest
exploitations (for timber, paper...) stole the forest areas from
indigenous
people. Private companies logged forests to exhaustion. When their
concession
from the government had expired, the companies went away, leaving
behind a
devastated area.
In 2002, when the
concession had expired in Sarwadi
village forest, the land remained barren. Peasants and indigenous
people
reclaimed it to produce food such as rice, beans and fruits. 1500
families
organised in the Indonesian Peasant's Union (SPI) occupied an areas as
wide as
101.365 hectares, where they tilled the land, they built their houses,
and
created their territories and communities.
Unfortunately, some local
and international
environmental NGOs established a company named PT Reki who asked the
government
the permit to use this area for ecosystem restauration. This consortium
of NGOs
consists of Yayasan Burung Indonesia,
Royal Society for the Protection of Bird (RSPB), and Bird-Life
International.
They received the permit to manage this areas for 100 years (1).
When the company took
control over the area, peasants
and indigenous people where kicked out of their land, they were
intimidated,
arrested and interrogated. They were forced to sign a letter where they
agree
to leave the area and to never come back again. Some peasants were sent
to jail
and then released. One of them was detained for 6 months for defending
hit
community's land.
On November 2, 2008, The
Prince of Wales was invited to Sumatra to see the reforestation efforts
made by the
Indonesian government. PT Reki became one of the places visited by
Prince
Charles in his campaign to save the rain forest. Using the large media
coverage
of this event, Dieter Hoffmann, head of the international program of
Birdlife
International, announced that the company was now exploring the
opportunities
of benefiting from REDD, the scheme negotiated during Bali Conference
on
Climate Change in December 2007. He said that if developed, this
particular
forest in Jambi province could absorb as much carbon as the annual
emissions of
Manchester.1
Sarwadi along with the
other farmers members of Via
Campesina currently in Poznan
denounce projects such a REDD. This new scheme allows companies to
prevent
family farmers to use the land to produce the food that is needed to
feed their
communities and their countries. Deforestation, which is one of the
main causes
of global warming, is not made by peasants and indigenous people, but
by large
companies that are given the right to commercially exploit the forest.
Therefore, forests should not be managed industrially by transnational
companies. They should be used by villagers who can manage them in a
sustainable way.
The Via Campesina
delegation in Poznan is shocked to see that the climate
talks are giving so much attention to the REDD initiative. It means
that the
debate is shifting from the obligation of developed countries to reduce
their
emissions to the obligation for developing countries to sink carbon.
The main
polluters would simply send some funds abroad and continue business as
usual.
The peasants of Via Campesina believe that instead of getting lost in
carbon
trading schemes, the conference should focus on implementing new
initiatives
aiming at changing the model of production. Local production and people
based
protection of resources should be encouraged because it uses less
fossil energy
and it maintains livelihoods and local communities. Small farmers
around the
world defend food sovereignty as a way to overcome the climate crisis.
It is
the people's right to define their own food policies, with a priority
to local
food production and sustainable small scale agriculture.
By Tejo Pramano and
Sarwadi Sukiman in Poznan
1. Antara
News "11/03/08 12:21, The Visit of the Prince of Wales to Harapan
Rain Forest
in Jambi-Sumatera
http://www.antara.co.id/en/arc/2008/11/3/the-visit-of-the-prince-of-wales-to-harapan-rain-forest-in-jambi-sumatera/
2. Jakarta
Post, 11/03/08, Prince Charles joins RI forest conservation drive
http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2008/11/03/prince-charles-joins-ri-forest-conservation-drive.html