The UK’s most respected and established
Environmental magazine, The Ecologist, has this week turned its attention to
Chief Minister, Abdul Taib Mahmud, with a major investigative article about his
record in Sarawak.
In a
devastating analysis it outlines Taib’s corruption and his lies about what has
happened to the Borneo jungle and its people. Even more significantly, on
the eve of the MoCS Red March, it
writes about a discernible change in the mood in Sarawak and speaks of real
hope of change. This is not least because Taib’s decades of
self-interested destruction and plunder have been well and truly exposed.
“Three
decades of government land seizures, rampant logging and oil palm expansion has
decimated Sarawak’s rainforest and disenfranchised its native population. Yet a
seismic political shift is occurring, which represents real hope for Sarawak’s
people and its beleaguered forests. Through the work of tireless activists, a
reform movement is rapidly gaining ground and exposing the duplicity of the
existing government, and its ‘Godfather’, the Chief Minister Abdul Taib
Mahmud”. [Ecologist Magazine]
International
reputation in tatters
Taib is the man who earlier
this year commissioned the discredited FBC Media to come in and do something
for his international reputation. The $5 million dollar contract was
supposed to get the Chief Minister and his policies positive publicity across
global TV stations, international forums and blogs.
Amongst other things FBC Media
launched a new site Sarawak Report(s) and placed articles in New Ledger, an
online right-wing site in the US, which focused on undermining
the investigations about corruption in our own blog, the real Sarawak
Report. These articles attempted to paint Sarawak Report as being run
by ’wild left-wingers’, instead of professional journalists, purely
because of the Editor’s family connection with the former Labour Prime Minister
Gordon Brown.
So, it will be doubly disheartening for Taib that
not only has his dirty contract with FBC Media been exposed and shown to have
entailed a large number of illegal activities on the part of that company, but
that his latest critics in the Ecologist are distinctly linked to the
Conservative Party instead.
Zac Goldsmith - the Conservative Party's foremost environment campaigner is the man behind The Ecologist |
The Ecologist is owned and run by the
long-time environmental campaigner Zac Goldsmith. Zac is an ex-Etonian,
Conservative MP and belongs to an extremely wealthy family of
businessmen. So no chance of using wild lefty accusations this time!
The truth is that all independent, onlookers,
whatever their political connections, can only be appalled at the greed and
theft that has been perpetrated by Taib upon his own land and his own
people.
Taib was handed one of the world’s last remaining
gems of nature and traditional culture and he couldn’t wait to cash it in – for
himself. He may hang on to power by buying supporters,
imprisoning critics and rigging elections, but Taib must now
know that reputation is one of the things that cannot be bought. His will
follow him to the grave and beyond as the man who put greed before
responsibility, compassion and concern for the people he was entrusted to
govern.
The
Red March
The world is waking up to the fact that one of the worst
environmental criminals of the past century is living and ruling in
Sarawak. The world is also becoming aware of the growing volume of
protest as brave people within Sarawak find the courage to challenge the old
dictator over his corruption.
Tomorrow the world will also be watching as
some of those protesters seek to exercise their right to freedom of
speech and expression and march through Kuching. As usual the authorities
are abusing their power by refusing permission and banning
the Red Marchers. MoCS President Francis Siah, was arrested on
arrival at the airport yesterday and told to present himself at the police
station today. He is bravely determined to go ahead and urges everyone in
Sarawak to find something red to wear tomorrow.
Taib should be careful what he does to these
innocent people and with such justified cause. Because now the world
is on to him – his reputation goes before him.
Full
text of the article in this week’s Ecologist: can be read below
The Ecologist published its investigation into Sarawak August 10th |
“Unseating
Sarawak’s Last Rajah: A Brighter Future for Borneo’s Indigenous People and
Rainforests?
Three decades of government land seizures, rampant logging and oil palm expansion has decimated Sarawak’s rainforest and disenfranchised its native population. Yet a seismic political shift is occurring, which represents real hope for Sarawak’s people and its beleaguered forests. Through the work of tireless activists, a reform movement is rapidly gaining ground and exposing the duplicity of the existing government, and its ‘Godfather’, the Chief Minister Abdul Taib Mahmud.
Three decades of government land seizures, rampant logging and oil palm expansion has decimated Sarawak’s rainforest and disenfranchised its native population. Yet a seismic political shift is occurring, which represents real hope for Sarawak’s people and its beleaguered forests. Through the work of tireless activists, a reform movement is rapidly gaining ground and exposing the duplicity of the existing government, and its ‘Godfather’, the Chief Minister Abdul Taib Mahmud.
In July 1946, Charles Vyner Brooke abdicated his position as the White Rajah of Sarawak, bringing a century of dynastic rule to an end. Yet sixty years later, despite its independence as part of Malaysia, Sarawakians are battling to unseat a new, thoroughly post-colonial type of Rajah: the Chief Minister-for-life Abdul Taib Mahmud.
On a modest public salary of £35,000 per annum, Taib cuts a larger than life figure. His shock of white hair is often accompanied by dapper double-breasted blazers, sunglasses and a prominent diamond ring. He is chauffeured around in a cream Rolls-Royce and resides in a palatial mansion in the capital Kuching which, among other trophies, reportedly boasts a $2 million piano of the late Las Vegas showman Liberarce1. Whilst tracing his roots back to the Brunei Sultanate, his informal paternal nickname, Pak Uban (‘White-haired uncle’) has been adapted by his critics to ‘Last White Rajah’.
Situated on the island of Borneo, 1000km from Malaysia’s capital Kuala Lumpur, Sarawak’s political relationship with central government had been contentious since Malaysia’s formation in 1963. The desire of Sarawak’s nascent political establishment to assert its autonomy was continually trumped by the central government, who wished to maintain tight control over Sarawak’s substantial oil reserves and quell any latent separatism in this, largely non-Muslim region. After seven years of battling, there eventually emerged a new political elite of Muslim natives whom Kuala Lumpur trusted, and to whom it granted a wide degree of latitude. This elite’s domestic power rested on a simple formula: as gate-keeper of Sarawak’s land and another of its natural bounties, tropical timber.
Taib was the second leader of this political dynasty, taking over the role of
Chief Minister from his uncle in 1981. In the subsequent power struggle, he
escalated the formula of control established by his uncle, becoming the
political patron of prominent Chinese timber barons (known as towkays or
‘masters’) and guaranteeing them vast logging concessions in exchange for their
unwavering political and financial backing. To ensure quietism from his peers
in the State Assembly, he also rewarded loyal politicians with shares in the
beneficiary companies, typically valued between $2-4 million.
As his clients cashed in on their concessions, a tropical timber boom ensued and Malaysia outpaced Indonesia as the world’s biggest exporter of tropical timber2. In 1990, the International Tropical Timber Organisation (ITTO) concluded that unless logging was stabilised at a lower level, the state’s forests would be exhausted within a decade3. In fact, after just 8 years in power, Taib had licensed 8.8 million hectares, almost the entirety of Sarawak’s forest for logging4.
The irk for Taib was that much of the land he took the liberty of dispensing as
political currency was inhabited by indigenous Dayak communities who had lived
and cultivated their land for generations, mostly pre-dating the creation of
the modern Sarawakian state. Thus, when bulldozers and pickup trucks arrived
brandishing permits for the land, clashes ensued which often turned violent.
During the height of the confrontations in the 1980s and 90s, the army and
police were deployed to back up the companies, resulting in several deaths and
hundreds of arrests under Malaysia’s draconian internal security laws5.
This rapid escalation of land seizures was justified in terms of economic development; ensuring Sarawak was part of Vision 2020 (the goal set by Prime Minister Mahathir Mohammad of Malaysia becoming a ‘fully developed’ nation by 2020). Native land was designated as ‘idle’ or ‘unproductive’, an impediment to commercialisation, and villagers who protested were patronised and belittled as backwards.
Yet contrary to this ethos of common good, it is plain to see whom the
overwhelming beneficiaries have been.
Most logging permits have been
awarded at grossly undervalued rates to private companies with political connections,
generating meagre amounts of government income. In the last three years, public
revenues from logging permits has averaged just £1.5 million per annum.
Conversely, export values in the same period of consistently topped £1.4
billion per annum, with the vast majority of these exports being unprocessed
logs rather than finished wood products. This suggests a truly ‘extractive’
model that intensifies upstream harvesting and minimises downstream investment
in infrastructure, jobs and skills 6. With such ludicrously low levels of
private investment and extremely high profits from export, it is unsurprising
that Sarawak’s timber tycoons have become some of the richest men in Malaysia.
The effects of this system on Sarawak’s environment and rural society have been transformative. Though Taib recently reiterated his claim that primary forest cover is at 70%, satellite images (pictured) or a flight over Sarawak’s hinterland show this to be patently false. Independent estimates put its primary forest cover at under 10%, in line with the prescient warnings the ITTO gave Taib in 1990 7 8. Yet the depletion of forests did not put an end to land seizures, which were then aimed at conversion into vast oil palm plantations, owned and operated by the very same companies (now international conglomerates) who made their fortunes in the timber boom. With international demand continuing to rise, the government plans to convert a whopping 2 million hectares into oil palm estates by 2020, with much of it on ‘idle’ native land9.
Taib’s effective formula of political patronage has been extended to almost every aspect of Sarawak’s economy, with his gilded family and allies being publicly listed shareholders on almost all lucrative land development and public works contracts, from hydroelectric dams to hospitals, road networks to luxury tourist resorts. Such concentration of money and power has led to staggering inequality, with indicators suggesting a rich-poor divide worse than Nigeria.
Such dire poverty is evident in Sarawak’s rural areas, where alienation of
native land for logging and oil palm has stripped communities of their natural
assets, their traditional self-sufficiency and independence. Some villages have
been paid compensation but mostly on grossly unfavourable terms for land leases
that would generate millions for the concessionaires. With little opportunities
for cash income, most rural youngsters have migrated to the cities or outside
Sarawak in search of work. Those villagers who have remained are dependent on
poorly paid labour positions in companies operating on their former land, along
with petty government handouts.
This economic disenfranchisement has left rural areas vulnerable to political manipulation and vote buying, which has, ironically, propped up the status-quo and allowed the land seizures to continue. “The problem is that politicians are elected by buying votes and their constituencies see them as a giver of money and not as a politician” explains reformist lawyer and politician See Chee How, “yet the representative needs to be close to the Chief Minister [Taib] in order to get logging or plantation schemes so that he can raise money to buy votes in the next election”.
The Rajah’s Shrinking Kingdom
Until recently, Taib’s system of patronage ensured almost total control, land alienation continued apace and Sarawak’s politics remained extraordinarily dull. In a land with isolated villages and little infrastructure, news traveled slowly, votes were bought, government promises never materialised and disaffected constituents lacked the means to challenge decisions10.
It took the initiative of indigenous activists to educate themselves in state law and, alongside reformist barristers in the cities, file test cases on behalf of dispossessed villages against the state government and beneficiary companies. Much to the ire of the government, the judge ruled in favour of the villagers11. These precedents prompted an avalanche of cases from affected communities, demanding compensation and official recognition of their native land rights, of which there are now over 180 pending in the high court. These legal battles, together with local NGO’s work in educating villagers of their legal rights, broadened awareness among indigenous communities about the deeper political malaise they were embroiled in.
With the government swiftly moving to block communities’ access to such legal
recourse, there emerged a growing consensus amongst Sarawakian activists that
their real hope rested in political change under the umbrella reformasi
movement that was rapidly gaining strength in West Malaysia. This awareness was
boosted by a flourishing new media network.
Two of Sarawak’s most
influential outlets have been Radio Free Sarawak and Sarawak Report, founded by
Peter John Jaban, a former employee from the Sarawak Land and Surveys
Department, and British investigative journalist Claire Rewcastle Brown. Based
in London, far away from Malaysia’s stifling sedition and media laws, these
outfits began investigating Taib’s empire and broadcasting its reports into
Sarawak, exposing not only the magnitude of Taib’s vested interests but also
where his illicit funds were ending up: not in Sarawak’s developing economy,
but in a convoluted offshore portfolio estimated to top $1 billion stretching
from London to Monaco, Ottowa to Sydney12. The tension deepened even further
when a prominent whistleblower, a former Taib aide named Ross Boyert was found
dead in an L.A. motel room with bag taped over his head in a rare form of
suspected suicide13. Members of the opposition have rightly pointed out that,
since Malaysia has one the world’s highest rates of illicit capital outflows,
totalling $291 billion between 2000-2008, Taib is an blinding obvious place to
begin the clean-up of Malaysia’s politics and economy14.
Following pressure from Swiss
NGOs, the Swiss President Micheline Calmy-Rey forwarded the Taib’s suspected
deposits in the Swiss back UBS to the national money-laundering authority, a
move which can only increase pressure on their counterparts in countries such
as UK, Canada, and the USA to follow suit.
All this agitation climaxed in
the state elections on 18th April 2011, where despite widespread reports of
gerrymandering, vote buying and electoral fraud by the ruling coalition, the
opposition gained 15 seats in the state assembly, denying the ruling coalition
control over the major cities15. From the public response, it is clear that
many see these elections as the high tide mark for Taib’s rule. Sarawakians are
now relishing the challenge of political reform ahead of them, illustrated by
the 40,000 people who took to the streets in the small capital Kuching in
support of reform, one of the biggest rallies in Malaysian history.
With an effective opposition in
the legislature, an emboldened civil society, international money laundering
investigations and court cases piling up against members of Taib’s network, the
existing system could well begin to unravel. The most inevitable factor
weighing in against them is Taib’s own mortality. At 75, he is a political
veteran who has spent thirty years cultivating his supremacy over Sarawak’s
politics and economy, controlling 50% of the Sarawak’s state budget through his
additional roles as Minister of Finance and Minister of Planning and Resource
Management. This has led to a system that is inefficient and top-heavy, not
only in the public sphere but also in the private. Of the conglomerates who
dominate Sarawak’s economy, which number less than ten, all have long-standing
personal connections to the Chief Minister’s inner circle and rely on his
political predominance for lucrative leases and contracts. In a society where
political engagement and access to independent news is on the rise, the ruling
government finds itself in an impossible situation: increasingly difficult to
defend the duplicity of status quo, yet unable to undertake significant reform
for fear of losing power.
Malaysia’s federal elections
are expected to be called in 2012, and Malaysians are already heaping pressure
on the ruling coalition to undertake electoral reform prior to the polls, to
ensure that the results are, unlike previous occasions, free and fair. In July
2011, tens of thousands of protestors, including many Sarawakians, flooded
Kuala Lumpur demanding these basic reforms, resulting in a brutal crackdown by
the police. The opposition are confident that the the public want to begin a
new political chapter for the first time since independence, and that electoral
malpractice is the final obstacle to overcome.
In Sarawak, opposition parties
have clearly articulated the basic structural changes necessary for a more
efficient and just economy. Their policies have a strong emphasis on cleaning
up land tenure and development practices. For example, in forestry, they have
pledged to step up reforestation, reduce the size of logging concessions and
encourage downstream timber processing whilst adopting tougher regulations on
extraction that would make Sarawak’s timber more valued on the international
market; all moves that would strengthen the sustainability of the sector in the
long run. Whilst rather than focusing on vast oil palm estates on alienated
land, they advocate granting indigenous communities titles and encouraging
cultivation in small holdings and more favourable joint ventures. In addition,
ensuring open tender processes for land development or public works contracts
would raise more public revenue, allowing for greater investment in services,
human capital and infrastructure, diversifying the economy away from its reliance
on the primary sector”.
Given that most of local
opposition leaders have fought tooth and nail against Taib’s rule and have
officially represented indigenous communities in their legal battles, there is
considerable reason to believe they possess the political will to follow
through with these sweeping reforms. Such moves would represent a huge step
forward for the empowerment of Sarawak’s indigenous population, and for the
conservation of its rainforests.
Yet Taib remains in power, and
despite his tenuous grip, will undoubtably continue to use his leverage over
Sarawak’s natural resource to this end. In the meantime, the giant logging and
oil palm companies spawned under Taib’s rule have already moved to pastures
new: Papua New Guinea, Guyana and West Africa. As such, international civil
society must learn from the case of Taib in understanding the crucial links
between weak governance and destructive social and environmental policy, with
the aim of exposing and disrupting such odious ties, wherever they appear.
1Asian Wall Street Journal. February 7th. 1990.
2Mongabay Malaysian Profile –http://rainforests.mongabay.com/20malaysia.htm
1Asian Wall Street Journal. February 7th. 1990.
2Mongabay Malaysian Profile –http://rainforests.mongabay.com/20malaysia.htm
3Ross. 2001. 148 – Timber Booms and Institutional Breakdowns in Southeast Asia.
4 FERN/JOANGOHutan.2006.8
5Our Land is Our Livelihood, IDEAL.
6http://blog.securities.com/2011/03/malaysia-timber-export-recovery-2010/
7http://www.sarawakreports.org/2011/03/22/logging-and-the-rain-forests-taib-open-to-%E2%80%9Cindependent-and-international-inspection%E2%80%9D/
8http://news.mongabay.com/2011/0328-sarawak_google_earth.html?homepg
9http://biz.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2010/11/30/business/7432538&sec=business 10There have been well documented instances of vote buying and political manipulation by promised infrastructure. Please see Sarawak Report for recent instances and for earlier examples, ‘Our Land is Our Livelihood’. IDEAL. 2001
11Test Case of Nor Anak Nywai vs Borneo Pulp & Paper Sdn Bhd.-http://borneo.live.radicaldesigns.org/article.php?id=665
12List of Taib’s assets http://www.stop-timber-corruption.org/resources/black_list_taib_assets_2011_02_21.pdf
13Malaysia Today. http://malaysia-today.net/mtcolumns/from-around-the-blogs/35174-taibs-former-us-aid-found-dead
14Illicit Financial Flows from Developing Countries: 2000-2009
http://chiengjen.blogspot.com/2011/01/massive-illicit-financial-outflow-from.html
15Ross. 2001. 148
Source : Sarawak Report
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