US human rights report shines spotlight on Borneo tribe
US human rights report shines spotlight on Borneo tribe
A new US government human rights report has
highlighted the Penan
tribe’s battle to protect their
rainforests in Sarawak, in Malaysian Borneo, from
logging.
The US State Department document cites claims by indigenous rights groups that Sarawak Chief Minister Taib Mahmud’s government has leased the Penan’s land ‘to logging companies and land developers in exchange for political favors and money’.
Taib Mahmud has been in power for 30 years, and won state elections last week. Thousands of Penan tribespeople were unable to vote, because they have not been issued with identity cards.
The US
report describes accounts that ‘logging companies harassed
and
sometimes threatened vocal Penan leaders’ and that
‘workers from two logging companies… regularly sexually
abused Penan women and girls’. A government minister has
confirmed the rapes, but no action has been taken against
the perpetrators.
The hunter-gatherer Penan are
fighting to keep their last remaining
rainforest safe
from the logging companies. One Penan woman told Survival
International, ‘Our land and our river have been destroyed
by the logging company, by the oil palm plantation. It
brings hardship and suffering to our land.’
Survival’s director Stephen Corry said today, ‘The State Department report adds weight to growing worldwide condemnation of the Sarawak government’s treatment of the Penan. The Penan’s human rights are being ignored, their forests destroyed, and their survival threatened.’
To read this story
online:
http://www.survivalinternational.org/news/7228
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