Indonesian President Joko Widodo yesterday ordered government officials to find a permanent solution to prevent devastating annual forest fires that have been almost entirely started by people.
Indonesia last year suffered the worst forest blazes in four years when 1.6 million hectares of its forests and peat lands were burned.
The World Bank estimated total damage and economic losses from the fires of US$5.2 billion.
Photo: Reuters
Southeast Asia has for years suffered from smoke caused by the fires, which raised health and environmental concerns and at times diplomatic tensions between neighbors.
“Find a solution, a more permanent one against economic-motivated forest fires, because according to reports I have received, 99 percent of forest fires were started by humans,” Widodo told a meeting with Cabinet ministers and heads of agencies in charge of extinguishing fires.
Indonesian farmers often use fire to clear land during the dry season, but they can rage out of control and produce a choking haze. Palm oil cultivation is often blamed for land clearance in places like Sumatra and Borneo islands.
The Indonesian fires have been blamed for increasing greenhouse gas emissions and deforestation that can endanger wildlife, such as orangutans.
Anyone caught using fires to illegally clear land for plantations can face up to 15 years in jail and fines, but green groups claim the laws have been poorly enforced.
Widodo also said that Australia’s bushfires had burned 11 hectares of forests and lands and are estimated to have killed up to 1 billion native animals.
“Climate change, rising temperatures, we all have felt them. Don’t let [fires] become big during the very hot weather or they will become hard to control,” he said.
He ordered more frequent patrols on the ground by security personnel across the nation, especially in fire-prone areas, such as Riau, Jambi, North Sumatra and South Sumatra provinces.
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