Monday, June 29, 2015

Hot and dry until August

the star

BY LOH FOON FONG, NEVILLE SPYKERMAN, KATHLEEN ANN KILI, ROYCE TAN, CHONG KAH YUAN, LOGEISWARY THEVADASS, V. MIENALOSHYANI, AND JER WEANN ANG

Relief from the heat: Children cooling off at the water fountain in front of Petronas Twins Towers in Kuala Lumpur. — AZHAR MAHFOF / The Star
Relief from the heat: Children cooling off at the water fountain in front of Petronas Twins Towers in Kuala Lumpur. — AZHAR MAHFOF / The Star
PETALING JAYA: The hot and dry season has begun and is expected to last until end of August.
The country is smack in the active phase of the south-west monsoon, according to Malay-sian Meteoro­logical Department’s National Weather Centre senior meteorologist Dr Hisham Mohd Anip.
“It is normal to have this kind of weather during this period,” he said when commenting on the hotter and drier weather.
MetMalaysia stations were recor­ding daytime temperatures ranging between 33°C and 35°C.
In its weather bulletin for May, MetMalaysia noted that most areas in Malaysia recorded average higher temperatures than the long-term average for the month.
If it is any relief, the temperatures are not expected to go higher than those recorded between February and March, when they ranged as high as 37°C to 38°C.
Dr Hisham said this was because the sun was located further north of Malaysia compared with being directly above the country between February and March.
He also said that it was normal for most parts of the country to receive less rainfall during this season, except for Sabah and northern states of the peninsula.
Most states could expect to receive 100mm to 150mm rainfall per month, half of that from March to May, he said.
However, for the northern states of the peninsula and the western part of Sabah, the opposite was occurring, with rainfall in the northern states hitting 150mm to 250mm, significantly higher from the 50mm to 150mm seen in March to May.
Sabah has a much lower average for the past four months, with less than 50mm per month, though the western part of the state (where Mount Kinabalu is) has a had normal rainfall of 200mm to 300mm so far this month.
On the El Nino phenomenon, which is expected to cause tropical Pacific Ocean surface temperatures to rise, he said it did not have much impact currently and was still at weak-to-moderate stages around Sabah and northern parts of Sarawak.
Dr Hisham said as the season progressed, the haze was expected to return.
Although Singapore’s Meteorolo­gical Services reported scattered or isolated hotspots with localised plumes and haze in central Sumatra, western Borneo and Vietnam, the Air Pollution Index (API) shows that Malaysia was still free from haze, which usually accompanies the hot and dry weather.
Good or moderate air quality was recorded throughout the country yesterday.
Related story:

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

Indigenous rights group calls for PSC to look into land disputes

the star
BY LOH FOON FONG

PETALING JAYA: The Indigenous People’s Network of Malaysia has called for the setting up of a Parliamentary Select Committee for land disputes following a task force’s findings on an indigenous land inquiry report.
The network, or JOAS secretariat director Jannie Lasimbang said the PSC could also look into efforts to prop up redress mechanisms such as the Native Title Court or Land Tribunal.
“We strongly urge for the formation of a PSC to monitor the research and drafting/amending relevant legislations and work with the local/state authorities on the Prime Minister’s commitment to resolve land disputes,” she said in a statement on Tuesday.
Lasimbang gave an overview on the issues and conveyed JOAS’s recommendations and petitions to 20 MPs at an opposition party’s office in a parliamentary briefing last Tuesday after Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Datuk Paul Low announced that the Cabinet had approved the formation of a Cabinet Committee for the Land Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
The committee, headed by Deputy Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyidin Yassin, was to address, monitor and implement the findings of the Government’s task force’s report dated Aug 14.
The Cabinet had approved all 18 recommendations of the task force that looked into Suhakam’s inquiry report on indigenous land rights, except for the setting up of the Commission on Indigenous Peoples.
Lasimbang said the PSC should also examine the role of Performance Management and Delivery Unit (PEMANDU) in developing indigenous territories and look into the drafting of a law and procedures on obtaining free, prior and informed consent of the orang asal when their land was involved in any development projects.
The PSC could also look into setting up the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples, she said. 

Wednesday, June 17, 2015

Cabinet forms committee on indigenous land rights

the star
BY LOH FOON FONG

PETALING JAYA: The long-awaited decision on indigenous land rights is finally out.

The Cabinet approved all 18 recommendations of a task force that looked into Suhakam's inquiry report on indigenous land rights, except for the setting up of the Commission on Indigenous Peoples.

Minister in the Prime Minister's Department Datuk Paul Low said the Cabinet had on June 3 also approved the formation of a Cabinet Committee for the Land Rights of Indigenous Peoples to address, monitor and implement the findings of the Government’s task force’s report dated Aug 14.

The Cabinet Committee will be headed by Deputy Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyidin Yassin.

Low said that the functions of the Commission would be best served by the Committee for now.

"However, the task force would play a key role in this new Cabinet Committee," said Low in a press release on Tuesday.

Low set up the task force in September 2013, with government agencies and ministries, state agencies and also civil society experts who reviewed the findings of the Human Rights Commission of Malaysia’s (Suhakam) Report of the National Inquiry Into The Land Rights Of Indigenous Peoples dated July 19, 2013.

"The Cabinet Committee will be calling upon state governments for their cooperation in the interest of our national heritage, the orang asli and orang asal," said Low.

He said the setting up of the Cabinet Committee demonstrated the government’s commitment to the challenging issue.

The complex and numerous recommendations of the Suhakam Report – 51 in all – were digested by the task force and put into phases and time frames of within a year to three years.

The list of 18 main headings for the 51 recommendations were:

1. Land Tenure Security

2. Clarification of Customary Cultural Right of Tenure

3. The Return (restitution) for the Rights of Indigenous Lands Which Are Not Recognized

4. Mechanisms of Justice (Redress Mechanisms)

5. Addressing Policy and Planning

6. Review of Compensation

7. Applying Human Rights Based Approach for Legal Development and Free and Prior Informed Consent

8. Ensure Land Development Does Not Adversely Affect Indigenous Peoples

9. Promoting Successful Development Models

10. Policies Which Are Environmentally Friendly and Sustainable Development

11. Measures for the Settlement of Indigenous Peoples

12. Recognition of Rights of Indigenous Persons in Protected Areas

13. Encourage Active Participation of Indigenous Persons in Forest Management

14. Establish a Comprehensive Review of JAKOA

15. Enhance Capacity of Land Departments

16. Reviewing the Response to Land Issues

17. The implementation of the Immediate Improvement Measures

18. Establish the Independent National Commission on Indigenous Peoples.

Monday, June 8, 2015

1MDB: Resignation of board not enough, says Guan Eng

the star
BY LOH FOON FONG

Published: Monday June 8, 2015 MYT 2:40:00 PM
Updated: Monday June 8, 2015 MYT 3:04:47 PM

1MDB: Resignation of board not enough, says Guan Eng


KUALA LUMPUR: News of the possible resignation of 1Malaysia Development Bhd's (1MDB) entire board of directors has been welcomed by Penang Chief Minister Lim Guan Eng (pic), but he says those involved must also take full responsibility for the fiasco.
He said he definitely agreed that they should resign just as the Deputy Prime Minister had earlier demanded.
"They should assume full responsibility for this fiasco," he said after giving his speech at the 7th Annual Corporate Governance Summit here Monday.
Citing unidentified sources, The Edge Financial Daily reported on Sunday that the entire board of 1MDB would be made to step down as early as July.
1MDB's six-member board of directors is led by chairman Lodin Wok Kamaruddin and CEO Arul Kanda.
The 1MDB has been embroiled in controversy for chalking up RM42bil in debts in less than five years.
Lim also said those behind 1MDB had to explain why they committed to financial transactions and became so heavily in debt.
"These are the issues they have to answer to and they cannot run away," he said, adding that 1MDB had to be cleaned up and rid of "toxic" assets.
He also questioned 1MDB's investment of US$1.103bil (RM4.14bil) in Singapore.
"What are these assets? It must be cash if you put in the bank. It cannot be gold bars or cincin. If not, what types of 'units' are you talking about?” he said.
In January, the Finance Ministry said 1MDB had deposited the funds it redeemed from its offshore account in the Cayman Islands into Singapore's BSI Bank, with the amount held in US dollars.
On March 10, it confirmed in a written reply to PJ Utara MP Tony Pua that the funds were held in the bank in the form of cash.
On May 19, however, the Government said the funds were not in the form of cash, but assets.
Two days later, Finance Minister II Datuk Seri Husni Hanadzlah said the funds were in the form of units.

Sunday, June 7, 2015

Long journey to land recognition

the star
BY LOH FOON FONG


    Basic comforts: Kuala Koh village head Hamdan (right) in a makeshift shelter in the village with his son Ramli (left).
Basic comforts: Kuala Koh village head Hamdan (right) in a makeshift shelter in the village with his son Ramli (left).
Communal forest land has been a bone of contention between indigenous people and the state for the longest time with the Government expected to decide on the issues soon.
IF there is one thing that the indigenous people or orang asal want to know, it is whether their communal forest land would be recognised by the Government.
The communal forest land is for hunting, finding jungle produce, doing shift cultivation and burying their dead.
The indigenous people claimed that the land belonged to them while the authorities said it was state land and only recognised dwellings and agriculture area as their territory.
Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Datuk Paul Low said the Cabinet would decide on a task force’s recommendations on a Suhakam report on the National Inquiry into the Land Rights of Indigenous People in a week or two.
Communal forest land is known as kawasan rayau in Peninsular Malaysia. It is calledpemakai menoa and pulau galau (fallow land) in Sarawak and paun in Sabah.
Borneo Resources Institute coordinator Mark Bujang said the Sarawak government deemed pulau galau as theirs because the natives had left the land. In actual fact, the community was rotating the use of the land within the same territory.
He said the term kawasan rayau was often thought by outsiders as a place they roamed about but this was not the case.
“For all indigenous people, there are boundaries and whoever trespasses the next community’s land, they would be fined,” he said.
Mark said in Sarawak, the adat (tradition) that the indigenous people practised was incorporated in the Sarawak Land Code.
Customary laws of the Sabah natives were incorporated in the Sabah Land Ordinance while the peninsula orang asli rights to land and land use was provided for in the Aboriginal Peoples Act.
But the problem, Mark claimed, was the Government’s refusal to acknowledge the communal forest.
“Despite the pulau still being used by the natives in Sarawak, more of their land had been opened up, resulting in less land for them.”
Moreover, Sabah and Sarawak governments used to recognise native customary land (NCL) but in the last 20 years, they refused to convert the land to NCL because they maintained it was their land, he said.
The burden of proof was put on the indigenous people, he said.
“If the Government is serious, they should amend the law to recognise kawasan rayauand pemakai menoa, not just the cultivated land,” he said.
Mark was sceptical about the task force’s role.
“For me, it is just a cosmetic change as the task force is only to make changes on administrative process,” he said.
Universiti Malaya Centre for Malaysian Indigenous Studies Assoc Prof Dr Juli Edo said the orang asli in Peninsular Malaysia claimed that their land included the communal forest.
“But the hunting areas included forest reserves and water catchment areas and the Government did not want to let it go,” he said.
He said the orang asli were also not happy that they were offered 0.8ha to 2.2ha of land per household when the Felda scheme offered the Malays 4ha of land per household, he said.
“The 2.2ha of land is not economical at all and they want to be given more as they are concerned that their future generations would have little land,” he said.
Juli said that for the indigenous people, land was not just a source of economic produce but closely related to their culture, social history and sacred sites.
The Suhakam report revealed that gazetted Orang Asli Reserves in 1990 were 20,667ha and 20 years later, in 2010, it went up by only 0.02%.
Four years after the inquiry, the land gazetted had interestingly increased at a higher rate to 31,480ha.
But 77.181ha still remain in the process of application. The number had not decreased much from the 86,000ha in 2010.
The report also revealed that some of the approved Orang Asli Reserves were not gazetted from as far back as the 1960s.
The indigenous people claimed that the land recognised by the Government in the peninsula comprised only 17% of their actual land.
The orang asli had said that claims to their traditional land and territories were often “invisible” in the eyes of the District and Land Office or the Lands and Mines Office.
Their land were not marked in the cadastral maps of the Department of Survey and Mapping Malaysia.
All these had made the orang asli vulnerable to being evicted from their land when licences were given out for logging and plantation work.
Centre for Orang Asli Concerns coordinator Dr Colin Nicholas said individuals and migrant workers had also begun to move into orang asli villages.
In Hulu Langat, Indonesian migrant workers who had received bumiputra status had moved into orang asli area while in Merapoh, Kampung Bercah, Pelubi, individual Malays had applied for land and settled in the village of the orang asli Batek tribe, he said.
“Often, the orang asli will flee when others take their land but in some areas where they have nowhere else to run to and settle down, they would stand up to fight for the land,” he said.
In Perak, the Semai of Kampung Senta had gone to court to lay claim to 2,206ha of customary land by way of native title under common law after a private company started moving into their land close to their houses in 2013.
However, they were served with eviction notices from the company which claimed that they were the rightful owner of the 113.7ha of the land in dispute, and had the title deeds to show for it, and suing them for trespassing.
The Semai were counter-suing to set aside the eviction order and for a declaration that the land was theirs by way of native title under common law.
Dr Colin said that while the Federal Government might say they had no power to compel the state to gazette Orang Asli Reserves as land comes under the state jurisdiction, Felda was initiated by the federal authorities.
“It depends on the political will.”
As for the states, they generally did not give or gazette land to orang asli because they were afraid that the land would no longer be in the hands of the state but given to the Federal Government.
However, he said state governments could create orang asli reserve land under the state laws.
Indigenous rights lawyer Dr S. Yogeswaran said the Federal Government could compel states to adhere to a uniformed land policy, despite states having their own laws.
Juli urged the Government to reserve all remaining orang asli land under the Aboriginal Peoples Act.
He said areas in nearby towns and lowland areas should be given individual titles while those in the ­interiors should be reserved as Orang Asli Reserves.
“When the area is reserved, it’ll be marked on the map. Otherwise, people will just apply for the land because it is unmarked,” he said.

A threat to their survival

MANY indigenous people lived in the jungle with limited contact with the outside world. But in recent decades, development moved into their remote villages, with some being evicted from the land they had lived on for centuries.
Outsiders would arrive unannounced. They cut the trees and took the logs out. Then the land was cleared for plantation, mining or dam construction.
In Sarawak, indigenous people and NGOs had objected to the Baram Dam, which is expected to uproot more than 20,000 people.
Located about 200km inland from Miri, the project will affect the Penan, Kenyah, and Kayan tribes.
Saleh Joho, 45, who is of a Jehai tribe in Kampung Sg Tekam in Gerik, Perak, said they faced hardship after loggers moved into the area.
“Now, we don’t have enough to eat after loggers destroyed the jungle,” said the father of 10 who earned RM100 a month.
Village head Tami Serdang said their ancestors had lived on the land for hundreds of years and loggers went into their area in 1991 without consulting them.
“We used to be able to get food, herbs, rattan and wood without going too deep into the jungle but we now have to walk about 90km inland,” he said.
Kampung Kuala Koh village head Hamdan, 50, said that loggers moved into their village three years ago.
“I was shocked. Then, suddenly, an oil palm plantation appeared early this year,” he said of the newly planted oil palm trees on vast land surrounding the village.
He said the site used to be a forested area they relied on for food.
His son Ramli, 30, said they could go deeper into the jungle for a week and yet come out with nothing.
“We used to be able to drink the water from Sungai Lebir but it is now dirty and most fish are gone,” Hamdan said, adding that the villagers had also become more sickly.
He said the villagers, who was moved from the Kuala Koh Taman Negara Resort location to the current place years ago, wanted the Government to gazette 688ha of their land as Orang Asli Reserves.
A Temiar orang asli in Kampung Sentep Gua Musang, Alang Jambu, 43, said the authorities had given reserved land for others but not for orang asli there.
Indigenous rights lawyer Dr S. Yogeswaran said the Federal Court and Court of Appeal had ruled that orang asli had legal rights over their customary land which they had continually occupied and used even though there was no official gazette or title given by the state.
Despite court precedents, their rights were still being ignored and they continued to be evicted because no action had been taken to amend laws to give effect to the legally binding principles, he said.
Department of Orang Asli Development (Jakoa) director-general Datuk Hasnan Hassan said the gazetting of orang asli reserve land was done by each state.
He said he did not know the reason for states not gazetting some of the land, some of which were approved from the 1960s.
“Land comes under state jurisdiction and the process of gazetting is done by the various land district offices,” he said.
Jakoa statistics showed that as of May last year, 31,480.44ha of orang asli land had been gazetted and 19,774.22ha had been approved by the state executive committee but were still being processed by the states’ Land Office to be gazetted under Orang Asli Reserve land.
Another 75,181ha of land had been applied or were in the process of being applied to be orang asli reserve land.
Hasnan said Jakoa would mark the boundaries of orang asli land and hand it over to various state governments to reserve the land but not all were implemented by them. He said orang asli reserve land included their houses, plantation and grave site areas.
Asked why they did not include the kawasan rayau (foraging area), Hasnan said Deputy Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin had announced that the policy on land ownership was for each orang asli household to be allocated 2.43ha of land besides 0.16ha for their house.
He said the foraging area was not included because the definition was subjective. One person may claim 30km radius and others 50km.
About 21,000ha of the land ­gazetted were developed by Risda and Felcra for oil palm or rubber plantations benefiting 12,000 households with each household receiving RM450 to RM1,200 a month, he said.

Saturday, June 6, 2015

Decision on native land soon

the star
BY LOH FOON FONG

PETALING JAYA: State authorities will be asked to put decisions on land affecting indi­genous people on hold should the Cabinet approve the recommendations of a special task force.
The task force, set up to review the Human Rights Commission’s report on the National Inquiry into the Land Rights of Indigenous People, also recommended that state authorities refer to a master list on traditional land ownership before making land decisions.
Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Datuk Paul Low said the Cabinet would make its decision in a week or two.
Asked if all 18 recommendations by Suhakam would be endorsed, he said it was not necessary because the issues were complex and many things had to be taken into account.
“The Cabinet has considered and reviewed all recommendations,” he told The Star.
He also said that there was no need for it to be tabled in Parliament.
“When the Cabinet approves it, we will then decide on the mechanism, framework and monitoring system to implement the re­­commendations,” he said.
Among the difficult issues that would be addressed included defining customary land and balancing national interest with justice for the indigenous people, said Low.
The task force also recommended that the communal land concept, apart from indivi­dual titles, be granted to orang asli and their land that had been identified to be reserved and gazetted.
It urged that a comprehensive study be carried out on the concept of “pegangan adat”(orang asal/asli traditions on land ownership and practices) before any law or policy was amended.
On Suhakam’s call for a redress mechanism, the task force had recommended that legal assistance be given to all cases involving such land.
In 2010, Suhakam conducted the inquiry following numerous complaints and memoranda from the indigenous community on the violation of their human rights, especially on customary land rights.
The Suhakam report was released in August 2013.

Thursday, June 4, 2015

Orang asli homes torn down

the star
BY LOH FOON FONG AND KATHLEEN ANN KILI

Broken homes: A child crying in the middle of the village houses that were torn down by the authorities in Gunung Arong, Mersing, Johor. — Photo is taken by Tolo Lee.
Broken homes: A child crying in the middle of the village houses that were torn down by the authorities in Gunung Arong, Mersing, Johor. — Photo is taken by Tolo Lee.
MERSING: A group of orang asli women were about to start cooking when a group of 100-odd enforcement officers moved in to tear down eight wooden homes in the Gunung Arong forest reserve in Kampung Batu 10 on Tuesday, leaving 50 Jakun homeless.
The seven families are now living in makeshift tents by the roadside after their homes were torn down.
Village representative Awang Rambai, 49, said the operation involved more than 100 people, including police and Forestry Department officers.
“They told us to remove all our belongings and move into the jungle, or they would push down our homes and shoot our chickens and dogs,” he said.
Awang said the community had lived there for six years and claimed the right to the land and forest produce.
“We wrote to the department, the Mentri Besar’s office and even the Prime Minister, but we never got a proper reply,” he added.
Several months ago, the authorities had told them to move to Kampung Kerpan in Rompin but they refused as there was no source of income there “while the forest has depleted”.
“Here, I can do some farming and the forest is accessible. The government gave part of the forest reserve to loggers and miners, but why can’t they let us stay?” Awang, who used to live in Kota Tinggi in Johor and Rompin, asked.
His wife Kamisah Alan, 43, said she was about to start cooking when she saw a team of officers coming. Holding back tears, the mother of six said she grabbed whatever she could before heading out to help the other families when the team ordered them to get out.
Siu Begani, 35, who lost his disabled person’s identification card in the incident, said the orang asli had no choice but to sleep on the ground.
Siu, who lost his right leg in a mishap at work six years ago, said most of their daily provisions and children’s items were damaged.
“We barely make ends meet, and now, most of our things are gone. How are we to survive?” he said in between sobs.
Centre for Orang Asli Concerns public policy researcher/volunteer Chung Yi Fan said the orang asli only occupied a 2ha plot, which was nothing compared to that given to loggers and miners.
“The concern now is on the 20 to 30 schoolchildren. What is going to happen to them?” he said.
He said the state and federal governments needed to step in as it was their responsibility.
“They may enforce the law but they can’t demolish the houses and leave them (orang asli) out in the cold,” he said.
Chung said the authorities should not have acted in that manner, as it was not customary for orang asli to set up base in a village they did not belong to.
He said the group was “dumped” at the Pahang border about three years ago. “Why are they treated like animals?” he said.
The Jakun have long been living along south Pahang, mainly in Rompin and Pekan districts and central to northern part of Johor.

Johor forestry dept confirms levelling orang asli village

MERSING: The Johor Forestry Department has confirmed that the demolition of the orang asli village in Gunung Arong was done during a joint enforcement operation.
“The area that they have been living in is a permanent forest reserve, and does not belong to the orang asli. We have given them a year to move out.
“Despite issuing several notices, they are still reluctant to relocate.
“We have given them ample time and even referred them to the Department of Orang Asli Development (Jakoa), but they still refused to move,” said state Forestry director Mohd Ridza Awang.
He said the operation, involving 113 officers from nine relevant agencies, was conducted in an orderly manner and the authorities aided the small community in evacuating whatever they could.
Among the agencies involved were the Forestry Department, police and Rela and the Mersing local council.
In Kuala Lumpur, Jakoa director-general Datuk Hasnan Hassan said the orang asli were from Pahang.
“Five houses are being built for them in Rompin, Pahang, and will be completed mid-next month,” he said, adding that he would investigate the matter as the department had earlier requested for the demolition to be delayed.