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View all search resultsASEAN urgently needs to adopt its Environmental Rights Framework to break the pattern of blatant impunity for perpetrators fueling an endless cycle of violence and threats against land and environmental defenders amid weak and ineffective law enforcement in the region.
Quickly adapting to the EUDR requirements and embracing sustainable practices not only opens up greater access to the EU market but also presents an opportunity for Indonesian companies to position themselves as global leaders in sustainable commodity production
Most outstanding of the challenges are the overlapping regulations and institutions, the rising wave of land conflicts with indigenous communities, deforestation, illegal mining and other practices of reckless natural resource extraction.
Beyond the iron-fist response to the residents’ protests against the Rempang Eco-City project, it seems as though the government is turning a blind eye to Chinese investment on the island, which could be a pawn in Indonesia’s claims to the territorial waters abutting the South China Sea.
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