Forest's mining law under review
Thursday, March 24 2005 - 03:20 AM WIB
Coordinating Minister for the Economy Aburizal Bakrie, Minister of Justice and Human Rights Hamid Awaluddin, Minister of Forestry Malam Sambat Kaban and Minister of the Environment Rachmat Witoelar were present at the hearing, which also saw the presence of representatives of non-governmental organizations as the plaintiffs.
The NGOs are seeking the revocation of Law No. 19/2004 that allows 13 companies to resume open-pit mining in protected forests. The law confirms a government regulation in lieu of the Law on the same issue.
A lawyer representing the NGOs, Uli P. Sihombing, said his clients paticularly opposed to provide legal certainty for mining in forests and to attract investment.
The plaintiffs say the Law violates the basic right to enjoy a good and healthy environment and the principle of sustainable development.
Aburizal told the court the Law was enacted to provide legal certainty in the mining sector beacuse the prohibition of mining operations in protected forests, as stipulated in Law No.41/1999 on forestry, came after the government had granted a number of mininf companies concession to conduct open-pit mining in forests.
The government has short-listed the mining companies granted the permit from 150 to 13 in a bit to prevent further environmental destruction, Kaban added.
Hamid claimed that the government had taken into consideration the principal of sustainable development in issuing the government regulation and the Law, saying the selected mining companies were subject to strict condition before, during and after the operations.
"They must obey a series of conditions for operating in protected forests in a bit to minimize the adverse impacts of their operations on the environment", he said.
The government has come under critism for endorsing the controversial legislation.
The Law , which was sponsored by the Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources and the State Secretary, was endorsed by The House of Representatives early in September last year.
Some legislators who opposed the bill said a number of their colleagues were bribed to past the draft law.(*)
