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Date: November 25, 2024 Mon
Time: 8:24 pm
Time: 8:24 pm
Results for offenses against the environment (indonesia)
2 results foundAuthor: Environmental Investigation Agency Title: The Thousand-Headed Snake: Forest Crimes, Corruption and Injustice in Indonesia Summary: This report exposes how corruption and collusion at all stages of the justice system, from the police and prosecutors to judges, conspires to ensure that the main culprits behind illegal logging in Indonesia remain at liberty. Details: London: Environmental Investigation Agency, 2007. 28p. Source: Internet Resource: Accessed March 13, 2012 at http://www.eia-global.org/PDF/Report--THS--forests--MAR07.pdf Year: 2007 Country: Indonesia URL: http://www.eia-global.org/PDF/Report--THS--forests--MAR07.pdf Shelf Number: 124471 Keywords: Corruption (Indonesia)Environmental Crime (Indonesia)Illegal Logging (Indonesia)Offenses Against the Environment (Indonesia) |
Author: Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) Title: Permitting Crime: How palm oil expansion drives illegal logging in Indonesia Summary: The clear-cutting of forests to make way for oil palm plantations is driving a wave of illegal logging in Indonesia, fundamentally undermining efforts to bring much-needed reform to the nation's forestry and timber sectors. A new report released today by the Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA), Permitting Crime: How palm oil expansion drives illegal logging in Indonesia, reveals how a widespread culture of corruption and poor law enforcement is generating a flood of illicit timber as plantations surge into frontier forests. In-depth case studies of blatant violations of licensing procedures and other laws in Central Kalimantan - a hotspot for forest crime - detailed in the report include: - outright violations of plantation licensing, timber and environmental regulations by firms clear-cutting forests in some of Indonesia's richest tracts of rainforest; - clear links between a series of palm oil concessions, a corrupt regent and one of the highest-profile Indonesian political graft cases of recent years; - attempts by a palm oil firm to pay US$45,000 to police to bury an investigation into its illegal operations; - local governments selling-out customary communities and facilitating the transfer of millions of dollars of their resources to private firms. The report explains how almost all palm plantations nationwide are willfully evading Indonesia's Timber Legality Verification System (Sistem Verifikasi Legalitas Kayu, or SVLK), a mandatory law implemented in September 2010 as a cornerstone of efforts to ensure only legal timber is produced in the country. Details: Washington, DC; London: EIA, 2014. 28p. Source: Internet Resource: Accessed April 16, 2015 at: http://eia-international.org/wp-content/uploads/Permitting-Crime.pdf Year: 2014 Country: Indonesia URL: http://eia-international.org/wp-content/uploads/Permitting-Crime.pdf Shelf Number: 135244 Keywords: ConservationForestsIllegal LoggingOffenses Against the Environment (Indonesia)Palm Oil |