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National scene: Law enforcement '€˜weak'€™ against big business

JAKARTA: A green group has warned that law enforcement in the environmental sector is effective at cracking down on ordinary citizens but leaves big business untouched

The Jakarta Post
Jakarta
Sat, April 4, 2015 Published on Apr. 4, 2015 Published on 2015-04-04T10:21:41+07:00

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J

AKARTA: A green group has warned that law enforcement in the environmental sector is effective at cracking down on ordinary citizens but leaves big business untouched.

NGO the Indonesian Center for Environmental Law (ICEL) said that President Joko '€œJokowi'€ Widodo'€™s administration, which took office on Oct. 20, 2014, had failed to persecute a number of companies that had conducted illegal logging activities, which had caused severe environmental damage in Indonesia.

The head of the NGO Henri Subagiyo said law enforcement in Indonesia was effective only in prosecuting poor people while it was weak against big firms. '€œJokowi'€™s slogan of law enforcement without discrimination has not been proven true,'€ he said during a roundtable discussion on Thursday.

ICEL was referring to a number of companies allegedly involved in forest fires in Riau in 2014 against which the legal process appears to have met a dead end.

As previously reported, a massive forest fire in Riau in early 2014 sent haze to the neighboring countries of Malaysia and Singapore.

Governments from the two countries complained to the Indonesian government, which launched a probe into several companies. No disclosures have yet been made.

ICEL also said that President Jokowi should prioritize enforcing environmental laws on big companies because they caused greater environmental damage.

'€œForests are not just trees, if they [the government] simply perceive forests as trees then they will just end up jailing a helpless individual like grandmother Asyani,'€ said Henri, who is also a lawyer.

Henri was referring to a 70-year-old woman in Situbondo who made headlines after being sentenced to three months in jail for allegedly stealing seven teak logs belonging to state forestry company PT Perhutani.

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