Showing posts with label Islands. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Islands. Show all posts

Thursday, May 27, 2010

RI, Australia to discuss Maluku`s small island problems

Antara News, Thursday, May 27, 2010 19:11 WIB

Ambon, Maluku (ANTARA News) - Indonesian and Australian government representatives will meet in Ambon on August 4-6, 2010 to discuss problems affecting small islands in Maluku province, a local official said.

The head of Maluku province`s maritime affairs and fisheries office, Polly Kayhattu said here on Thursday the discussions would follow up decisions made at the World Ocean Conference (WOC) which was held as part of Sail Bunaken in Manado, North Sulawesi in July 2009.

He said the conference, themed "Save the Small Islands in Maluku for the Next Generation," was being intensively coordinated by the provincial maritime affairs and fisheries office with the Australian Embassy in Jakarta.

"The international conference between Indonesia and Australia will focus on climate change and its impact on small islands in Maluku province," Kayhattu said.

According to him, matters related to investment in maritime and fisheries sector, illegal fishing, and fisheries management would also be discussed in the conference.

In addition, business meeting and interaction between Maluku and Darwin, Australia, would also be intensified.

"Maluku provincial government is consulting a plan to sign an cooperation agreement with Darwin through a coordination between Maritime Affairs and Fisheries Ministry and Australian Embassy," Kayhattu said.

He added that the Indonesia-Australia conference on small islands in Maluku would coincide with a seafood exhibition involving Australia, New Zealand, and Papua New Guinea (PNG) from July 31-August 5, 2010.

"The three countries: Australia, New Zealand, and PNG will also participate in the upcoming international marine event of Sail Banda 2010," he said.

Kayhatto added that the exhibition, themed "Seafood for Quality of Life," would have a strategic value to promote Maluku which is to be declared by President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono as the national fish barn here on August 3.

Monday, May 10, 2010

Komodo, Indonesia: Into the dragons' den

Sailing on a schooner around eastern Indonesia, Natalie Paris mixes sunbathing on deck with a spot of island exploration - and a meeting with the carnivorous lizards of Komodo.

Telegraph.co.uk, By Natalie Paris, 11:09AM BST 10 May 2010

While not exactly fire-breathing, these large monitor lizards have an acute sense of smell, large claws and a toxic bite

Indonesia's vast archipelago has always lured adventurers, with tales of stormy straits, desert islands and man-eating dragons. European trading ships sailed here in the 16th century in search of treasures. These days the Spice Islands, now known as Maluku, have fallen off the charts of the average seafarer, but farther south, legends of dragons live on. Here lie remote islands perfect for modern voyages of discovery.

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Dirk Bergsma, a latter-day explorer, got his first taste of the country in the Seventies when he caught a lift on a wooden schooner locals used to transport cargo. The journey inspired him to found a tour company, Sea Trek, that organises intrepid but relaxed cruises along the old spice routes. "You can sail to places so incredible you can't believe they still exist," he says.

Nearly two decades after Dirk bought his first schooner, I joined 14 other passengers boarding another on an adventure of our own. We might have had gin-and-tonics, sun loungers and a wonderful crew who rinsed our walking boots for us, but we still felt like adventurers.

Each day would start with some sailing, typically past pods of dolphins and lackadaisical turtles

The double-masted Katharina sails all over the eastern archipelago, including to Maluku, but our voyage was the most accessible that she offers – a 10-day trip east from Bali to the island of Flores and back. This popular itinerary allowed us to make various stops within the Komodo National Park, a diver's haven with sharks and manta rays below the surface, and above it, the island homes of one of the world's most impressive creatures – the Komodo dragon.

While not exactly fire-breathing, these large monitor lizards have an acute sense of smell, large claws and a toxic bite. Although they eat mainly carrion, they prey on deer and water buffalo, and have killed a human as recently as 2009. From Ari, our companionable guide on board the Katharina, I learnt that the dragons eat their dead and are cannibals, forcing their young to live in trees for up to five years to avoid being attacked. Suddenly our planned two-hour hike to spot them seemed less appealing, knowing that they could be anywhere around us – on land, in branches above us, in the sea. That's right. They swim, too.

An encounter with the lizards is certainly the most obvious reason to explore this scattering of volcanic islands, but there are plenty of others. In the couple of days before we went in search of dragons, the boat stopped at Flores ("Flowers"), an island named by the Portuguese that has smoking cones, fertile flanks and forested ridges studded with the tin roofs of villages glinting in the sun.

The winding island road, forever either climbing or falling, is lined with Catholic churches, neat wooden houses and tethered goats, pigs and tawny cows. As our driver negotiated the many switchbacks through the lush interior, old women squatting next to fires of coconut husks smiled up at us through lips stained red by betel-nut juice, and schoolchildren yelled "Hello, mister" at every bend.

We had come inland to see the dramatic crater lakes at the top of Mount Kelimutu, which change colour depending on mineral levels and have, in the past, been a rainbow palate of brown, cream, red, blue and emerald green. Kelimutu's three lakes have a spiritual meaning for locals and represent the afterlife.

The dramatic crater lakes at the top of Mount Kelimutu have, in the past, been a rainbow palate of brown, cream, red, blue and emerald green

At sunrise, two lakes that were brilliant turquoise during my visit were the first to be bathed in light. These are the two that welcome the spirits of the good and the young, and the sun gave them a pinky halo. Yet a chill remained at the third, on the other face of the mountain, supposedly the resting place of evil spirits. This lake was as black as an inkwell and, while it was shrouded in shadows, an air of foreboding was almost tangible.

That feeling returned a few days later on the boat, as we checked our zoom lenses and prepared to set foot on Rinca island, dragon territory. Rinca and neighbouring Komodo, where the dragons also live, have a more arid landscape than Flores. Shoes or flip-flops, I wondered? Apparently the dragons can launch themselves into a sprint as quickly as a small dog. Shoes it was, then. I had just started to weigh up whether it would be safer to stride out with the ranger or stay close to the group when our first group of dragons appeared right in front of us.

Six or seven lay under a ranger's hut, the occasional yellow forked tongue sliding from square jaws. They were just as big as I had imagined. Shutters whirred and we edged nearer. "Careful," one of the rangers said. "Not too close."

For a minute the dragons seemed docile. But then something disturbed the group. In a flash they rose up on haunches encased in folds of scales and darted forward at speed, their thick bodies switching from side to side in a manner that was alarming in something 10 feet long. Deep inside, some innate urge screamed "Run".

I flinched and the ranger laughed. "Don't worry," he said, waving a stick as if idly flapping at a mosquito. "Their noses are really sensitive; they will run away." We had no choice but to believe him and follow him into the woods.

These stocky predators are the largest lizards on earth and are a protected species. There are only about 4,000 of them living in the wild, all found on this cluster of islands. We spotted one with its head close to the ground, camouflaged by the trees. "He is waiting for a monkey," the ranger said. Sure enough, 15 yards along the track we saw a young family of long-tailed macaques skipping along the forest floor.

On the crest of a hill another dragon sat on its hind legs, leaning against a rock and staring down at the bay where the Katharina was docked. Fearing an ambush of the kind recently filmed by the BBC's Life crew – in which dragons had sat mercilessly waiting for a wounded buffalo to die, tongues flicking in anticipation – our group filed back down to the jetty with new purpose.

It was a pleasure to return to the blissfully relaxing routine of the Katharina. Soon I was sitting with my legs over her bow, sea salt in my hair and the waves slapping at my bare soles, watching another uninhabited island slip out of view.

On board were seven air-conditioned, amply appointed cabins, shared by passengers from all over Europe. We ate communal dinners with wine at a large, deck-top dining table and there were sun loungers for optional massages against the backdrop of sublime sunsets. The small lounge and bar downstairs was the perfect nook for nightcaps, and the crew raised handsome maroon sails whenever there was a brisk wind.

Each day would start with some sailing, typically past pods of dolphins and lackadaisical turtles, sheets of ferocious currents and whirlpools. Then, as we travelled slowly back to Bali, we would drop anchor in order to visit island communities on Flores, Sumbawa and Lombok. Some demonstrated how to weave ikat cloth, others how to master the steps of traditional dances.

In Sumbawa we disembarked onto a beach at Wera, where village children ran out to greet us and show us half-built wooden ships positioned like breakers along the black sand. Skilfully made but incomplete, they resembled skeletal Mary Celestes that required years of crafting before they could be blessed and put out to sea.

Sumptuous lunches would be dished up on board before afternoons spent snorkelling or exploring pristine beaches, such as the smudged pink sand at Gili Banta, turquoise bays around Riung and the corals at Gili Lawa.

Afternoons would be spent snorkelling or exploring pristine beaches, such as the turquoise bays around Riung


We came to learn that other passengers had enjoyed previous voyages on the Katharina. At night they swapped stories under the stars of journeys further east, of meeting warrior tribes and sailing through the Alor strait, where "there was nothing but swirling seas". A retired Dutchman told me on our final night: "You should come when we sail to Papua. Now that is truly magnificent."

As we approached the glittering lights of Bali's coastline, I felt every bit the returning explorer, with a successful voyage and encounter with fearsome reptiles under my belt. Even in this day and age, new adventures are always possible at sea.

Explore

(0844 499 0901; www.explore.co.uk) offers 16-night "East Indies Seatrek" tours including a 10-day Bali-Flores-Bali voyage on the Katharina between May and October. The trip includes four nights in a hotel in Bali on a b & b basis and nine nights' full board in ensuite cabins on the schooner: prices from £2,370 with international flights; £1,621 without. Between July and August, places are available for children at £2,478, with adult places costing £2,601, both with flights.

Sea Trek

(0062 361 283358; www.anasia-cruise.com) offers a range of voyages on the Katharina to Indonesian destinations farther afield.

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Four New Islands off Jakarta’s North Coast

Tempo Interactive, Wednesday, 07 April, 2010 | 18:49 WIB

TEMPO Interactive, Jakarta:The Jakarta Government will build four new islands off Jakarta’s north coast.

The island construction is related to the reclamation plans of two north coast areas, East Ancol and Pantai Indah Kapuk (PIK).

According to the Head of Jakarta’s Spatial Planning Gamal Sinurat, the area to be reclaimed is one island in East Ancol of 177 hectares and three islands in PIK of 821 hectares.

ISMA SAVITRI

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Water carrier

The Jakarta Post, Antara, Tue, 04/06/2010 1:55 PM

A woman paddles a small boat filled with buckets from the small island of Kampung Tobati in Jayapura, Papua on her way to look for clean water on the mainland Tuesday. The local residents have been having difficulty accessing clean water after a distribution pipe to the island belonging to the local state water company broke last year and has yet to be repaired. Antara/Anang Budiono


Sunday, April 4, 2010

Maldives Eyes Floating Golf Course as Sea Rises

Jakarta Globe, April 02, 2010

An slight increase in sea levels could make the Maldives uninhabitable by 2100. (AFP Photo)

The Maldives faces the threat of extinction from rising sea levels, but the government says it is looking to the future with plans to build homes and a golf course that float.

An increase in sea levels of just 18-59 centimeters would make the Maldives — a nation of tiny coral islands in the Indian Ocean — virtually uninhabitable by 2100, the United Nations’ climate-change panel has said.

President Mohamed Nasheed has vowed a fight for survival, and last month he signed a deal with a Dutch company to study proposals for a floating structure that could support a convention center, homes and an 18-hole golf course.

“It is still early stages and we are awaiting a report on the feasibility,” a government official said.

The company, Dutch Docklands, is building floating developments in the Netherlands and Dubai.

There was no immediate comment from the firm, but its Web site said it undertook projects that make “land from water by providing large-scale floating constructions to create similar conditions as on land.”

The Maldives began work on an artificial island known as the Hulhumale near the crowded capital of Male in 1997 and more than 30,000 people have been settled there to ease congestion.

The capital, which has a population of 100,000, is already protected from rising sea levels by a $30 million sea wall, and the government is considering increasingly imaginative ways to combat climate change.

Nasheed, who staged the world’s first underwater cabinet meeting in October to highlight his people’s plight, has even spoken of buying land elsewhere in the world to enable Maldivians to relocate if their homes are submerged.

He has also pledged to turn his nation into a model for the rest of the world by becoming “carbon neutral” by 2020.

His plan involves ending fossil-fuel use. 

AFP

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A computer rendering of the 'Citadel' building which will soon arise in The Hague's hinterland/ Photo: Waterstudio.nl


Thursday, April 1, 2010

Govt approves plan to rent Tabuhan Island to Maldives investor

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Thu, 04/01/2010 12:04 PM

Minister of Marine Resources and Fisheries Fadel Muhammad has approved the Banyuwangi regental administration's plan to rent Tabuhan Island to Maldives investor PT Safari International Resort.

"A recommendation letter has been received by the Banyuwangi regent," head of the investment section of the administration's development planning agency Made Mahartha said as quoted by tempointeraktif.com on Thursday.

The 5.33-hectare island, which is located at Bengkak village in Wongsorejo district, will be developed into a marine tourist site to be equipped with lodging facilities.

The island, which is at the Bali straits water, is now vacant. Its surroundings is well-known for its beautiful coral reefs, Made said.

Made explained that according the proposal, PT Safari will rent the island for 30 years at a cost of Rp 100 billion.

Banyuwangi Regent Ratna Ani Lestari, he said, had set up a regional coordination team led by administration secretary Sukandi.

The team will be in charge of further deliberating the cooperation draft, which will cover, among others, obligations and responsibilities of the two sides, revenue sharing scheme and environmental insurance.

"This has been regulation in Government Regulation No. 50/2007 on regional cooperation implementation," Made said.

The plan to rent the island had earlier sparked pros and cons from environmental activists, who demanded that the Banyuwangi administration strictly watch out the cooperation implementation, especially the environment preservation.

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Making the Most of Makassar

Jakarta Globe, Nadia Bintoro, March 30, 2010

Tiny Samalona Island offers visitors tranquility and solitude. (JG Photo)

While Makassar boasts what some claim to be the largest indoor theme park in the world — Trans Studio — a trip to the biggest city in Sulawesi might be better spent outdoors exploring the warm, clear waters of surrounding islands or venturing off for a visit to the cool stream that feeds the Bantimurung waterfall.

Island Hopping: Samalona and Lae-Lae

Makassar, the provincial capital that has served as Sulawesi’s major seaport for hundreds of years, is cradled in the arms of a natural harbor that makes it hard for tourists not to be tempted to step aboard one of the marina’s tour boats and head off to the surrounding islands and atolls.

If you are looking to take a day trip, there is an array of islands to explore, including Samalona, which is a quick seven-kilometer hop, and Kapuposang, 70 km away from the city.

Be sure to arrive at Kayangan Marina, just in front of the famous Fort Rotterdam, early in the morning and try to haggle with a handful of tour guides before deciding on your itinerary. Just like any other tourist destination, the guides can smell a naive traveler and will likely hike up the price of a trip, so be ready to negotiate.

After some fierce bargaining I finally settled on Rp 350,000 ($38.50) for a visit to Samalona and Lae-Lae islands.

The crew of three quickly loaded the boat and my friends I set off for the 45-minute ride out to Samalona.

Arriving on the island is like reuniting with an old friend. Once on the island a warm familiar feeling, probably in part to the smiling faces of the locals, seeps over you. Most of the 15 families living there make their living catering to visitors or fishing the water that surround the tiny 300-by-600-meter, oval-shaped isle.

The island was very relaxing. I snorkeled here and there, changing spots every hour or so without being bothered.

While Samalona is beautiful, the underwater vistas leave something to be desired. Various marine life can be seen in the calm, clear waters, but the snorkeling is subpar at best. I read that Samalona was once famous for its surrounding reef, beautiful sea garden and colorful tropical fish, but these glories are now a thing of the past.

Nonetheless, putting my head down in the crystal waters and feeling the beach breeze at my back made for a very tranquil experience.

With no restaurants on Samalona, visitors usually just buy their lunch straight from the fishermen. During my trip, the catch of the day was fresh fish for Rp 20,000. But there’s another catch: Rp 20,000 gets you the fish and the fish only. You must pay an additional Rp 50,000 if you want rice and chili to go with your meal.

After lunch, it was time to climb back on the boat and set off for Lae-Lae Island.

Lae-Lae, just 1.5 km from the capital and easily visible from the mainland, is just a 15-minute boat ride from Makassar’s famous Losari Beach, where tourists flock each night to walk the pier and enjoy the sunset.

Unfortunately, proximity to the mainland leaves Lae-Lae’s beach riddled with trash, making the waters surrounding the island a bad choice for snorkeling or swimming. Nevertheless, wandering the island and strolling the shores of Lae-Lae makes for a cultural treat.

The densely populated island is home to more than 400 families who, for the most part, subscribe to the traditional way of life. Old men nap quietly in the shade as the waves lap softly against the hulls of the fishermen’s ancient wooden boats while children joyfully play outside the mosque, giving the island it’s own distinct rhythm.

Bantimurung Waterfall Park

The Bantimurung waterfall takes its name from the local phrase membanting kemurungan , which translates as a place to get rid of sadness, and the cascade’s name says it all. The tranquil setting, complete with rare butterflies, lush valleys and steep limestone hills, is clearly capable of washing away any sorrow.

If your feeling adventurous Bantimurung, which is 15 km from Makassar, is easily accessible by pete-pete (public minivan) or a taxi.

After an hour and a half and three separate connections, I was at the gates of Bantimurung Waterfall Park, which 19th-century British naturalist Alfred Russel Wallace referred to as the “kingdom of the butterflies.”

But sadly, the growing trade in catching and collecting the gossamer-winged insects for tourist souvenirs is making their kingdom slowly disappear.

The butterfly museum inside the park, meanwhile, fails to properly showcase Bantimurung’s biodiversity. The collection is sad. Torn butterflies are displayed in a dusty glass windows featuring discolored labels. Some pins and identifiers for the once-brilliant insects are even missing. The stained floor and gloomy atmosphere of the one-room museum only encourages visitors to head back outside and enjoy the splendid scenery as soon as possible.

The park is always teeming with visitors. Families come and throw blankets down for picnics, while children and teenagers enjoy the cool water of the falls.

As I climbed past the picnickers and up the pathway, the waterfall — a 15-meter cascade of sparkling water flowing down between rocky cliffs into a stream shaded by trees — came into view. There are two different ways to enjoy the waterfall and the stream that leads away from it. Older visitors are free to climb the stairs and enjoy the scenery from above, while young adrenaline junkies can rent an inner tube and brave the tiny rapids below. As for me, I chose to do both.

The view from the top of the waterfall is nothing short of mystical one of the most interesting things to do at the park is watch the various species of butterflies flutter along the river below.

About 800 meters up the hill from the main waterfall, visitors are free to explore Gua Batu (Stone Cave), which is full of stunning stalactites and Gua Mimpi (Dream Cave), which is renowned for its raucous bats.

Outside the park, hawkers bombard tourists with an array of butterfly souvenirs, from simple key chains and T-shirts to actual butterflies tucked under glass. Having a keepsake to remember your travels is always good, but visitors should think twice before putting Sulawesi’s biodiversity at further risk .

Sunday, March 28, 2010

The black marketeers stealing Indonesia’s islands by the boat-load

From The Times, March 23, 2010

Anak Krakatau has risen through renewed volcanic activity to a height of 300 metres (Richard Lloyd Parry, Krakatoa)

For the people of Sebesi Island, who spend their lives next to the world’s biggest natural time bomb, it seemed to be an offer that they could not refuse.

A businessman from the Indonesian mainland landed one day with a remarkable proposal: to make safe their deadly neighbour, the notorious volcano island of Krakatoa, hulking in the sea a few miles across the water.

When Krakatoa exploded in 1883 36,000 people died and the dust thrown up by the eruption lowered temperatures and darkened skies across the globe.

So the fishermen welcomed the offer of trenches to channel the lava and reduce the danger of the next explosion. However, when the boats arrived and the work began, they realised with anger that the kindly businessman was not renovating Krakatoa. He was stealing it.

“There was a huge barge, the kind you use to carry coal, and it was pumping up the sand through pipes,” said Waiso, an environmental activist who investigated the activity. “This is a national park and a Unesco World Heritage Site and you’re not allowed to touch it. The local people rely on the fishing and the income from tourism, and here they were taking Krakatoa away.” And Krakatoa is just one case among thousands.

With more than 17,000 islands — from the jungly immensities of Borneo and Sumatra to unnamed rocks jutting out of the sea — you might think that Indonesia would not mind if a few of them went missing. But the South-East Asian nation is fighting a losing battle against black marketeers who are, literally, making off with its territory by the boat-load.

Sea reclamation projects in China, Thailand, Hong Kong and Singapore are driving a black market in Indonesia’s abundant supplies of soil, sand and gravel. In 2007 Indonesia banned the export of its sand and soil and threatened a shoot on sight policy against foreign sand pirates and gravel bandits. But, thanks to corrupt local officials who sign off on permits and turn a blind eye to where the material ends up, the smugglers are winning.

Since 2005 at least 24 small islands have disappeared as a result of erosion caused by sand mining. Even where they remain above the waves, the mining process clouds and muddies the sea, devastating fish populations and destroying livelihoods.

“The small islands don’t have large populations but their function in the ecosystem is very important,” said Riza Damanik, of the People’s Coalition for Justice in Fisheries. “In the Riau Islands the fishermen have lost 80 per cent of their income as a result of sand mining.”

Because the trade is illegal, an accurate accounting of how much material is being removed is difficult. Before the ban, however, sand miners might have removed 300,000 tonnes a month from a single island. “I’m sure that the amount of material removed altogether is bigger than the volume destroyed by the Krakatoa explosion,” Mr Riza said.

The eruption of Krakatoa ripped the island to pieces, leaving only fragments of the original landmass but, 127 years later, it is once again a highly active and unpredictable volcano. In the late 1920s a new peak, Anak Krakatau, or Child of Krakatoa, rose out of the sea and has climbed to more than 300m (1,000ft) at a rate of about a centimetre a day.

Since 2007 it has had periods of intense activity when lava and ash have spewed from its crater. But for local people it is a crucial source of income from the tuna, snapper and lobster that live there and the few thousand intrepid tourists who visit every year, as well as being a site of religious reverence.

A legendary prince named Syech Dapur is said to watch over the volcano and protect the people of neighbouring Sebesi, who were very gratified when the sand mining operation began to go wrong.

The pump kept breaking down; a worker was injured when his arm was sucked into a pipe; and after the fishermen’s observations of the illegal activity were reported in the media the smugglers slipped quietly away.

“The spirit of the island was angry with them,” said Iman Faisil, a local tour guide with a smile. “And we are angry too. If they come back we will make a human shield. We will burn their boats. This island does not belong to them; it belongs to all the world.”

Krakatoa is highly active volcano but locals rely on it as a source of income from the tuna, snapper and lobster that live there, as well as tourism

Related Article:

Indonesia’s Islands Are Buried Treasure for Gravel Pirates


Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Ambon to host coastal resources management conference

Antara News, Tuesday, March 23, 2010 16:00 WIB

Ambon (ANTARA News) - The 7th National Conference on marine, small islands, and coastal resources management will be organized in the eastern Indonesian city of Ambon on August 3-7, 2010.

Maluku Maritime Affairs and Fisheries Office chief Poli Kayhattu said over his cellular phone from Jakarta on Tuesday that at least two international experts on coastal resources management have confirmed to be the keynote speakers at the conference.

"Two small islands and coastal management experts, respectively from China and Maldives have confirmed to be the keynote speakers at the 7th National Conference on marine, small islands, and coastal resources management in Ambon," Kayhattu said.

He said the conference would be conducted as part of the upcoming international marine event of Sail Banda 2010, scheduled to last from July to August this year.

Kayhattu said that besides the international experts from China and Maldives, Coordinating Minister for Economy Hatta Rajasa and Maritime Affairs and Fisheries Minister Fadel Muhammad would also act as speakers in the conference.

The coastal resources management conference is part of Maritime Affairs and Fisheries Ministry`s biennial activity, and the one this year in Ambon is themed, "To Knit the Integration of Marine, Small Islands, and Coastal Resources Management for Food Resilience and People`s Welfare."

According to Kayhattu, the objective of the national conference in Ambon was to increase communication and information exchange in relation with marine, small islands, and coastal resources management for people`s welfare and food resilience.

"The conference will be attended by around 500 people who are expected to optimally formulate a new coastal resources management strategy to improve the local people`s welfare," Kayhattu said.

He expressed optimism that the 7th National Congress which had been conducted since 1998 would run well and successfully because various preparations were currently being made for the event.

Saturday, February 6, 2010

Naming islands not a simple issue

Yemris Fointuna, The Jakarta Post, Kupang, East Nusa Tenggara | Fri, 02/05/2010 11:15 PM


No less than 300 unnamed islands in East Nusa Tenggara province may soon be wiped from maps due to conflicts regarding their names, officials say.


Head of the provincial secretariat administrative office, Ricard Djami said residents held differences on the right names for unnamed islands.


“Some residents want islands named after their ancestors but others want them named after certain animals,” he said Friday. “These differences slow down the process of naming the islands.”


He said the administration would take the residents’ wishes into account and would work hard to meet the central government’s target to name all unnamed islands.


In the coming months, a team from the provincial and regency administrations will start encouraging people to agree on names for the unnamed islands, he added.


“Once the islands are given names the list will be sent to the UN to ensure legal recognition and to make sure no conflict occurs regarding the naming,” Ricard said.


Thursday, February 4, 2010

Selayar’s mangrove forest gone up in the air

Andi Hajramurni, The Jakarta Post, Makassar | Thu, 02/04/2010 11:14 AM

Sublime: The beachfront cottages at Selayar Islands Resort are a gateway to world-class diving and snorkeling sites. JP/David Metcalf

Mangrove deforestation in the Bua Bua Selayar delta area was protested by activists in Selayar Islands regency in South Sulawesi, who said the move would negatively impact the environment.

The protesters, affiliated with the Selayar Islands Environmental Awareness Community, aired their protest on Tuesday at the Sulawesi, Maluku and Papua Regions Environmental Management Center in Makassar, South Sulawesi.

The delta, located in the middle of Selayar Islands regency capital Benteng, so far acts as a barrier to prevent abrasion, floods and heavy winds.

“The Bua Bua delta plays a very important role for Benteng city as a shield against coastal abrasion,” said resident Asrahiyah Abubakar.

“The area, which comprises 2 hectares of mangrove, also protects Benteng from floods, strong winds and prevents sea water intrusion into residents’ wells.”

Around two hectares of the mangrove forest has allegedly been felled by a businessman who bought the delta from a resident.

The land purchase was allegedly facilitated by the local officials and authorized by the Selayar’s National Land Agency office.

The mangrove deforestation was carried out early January using heavy machinery.

Apart from mature mangrove trees, around 1,000 mangrove seedlings had also been damaged.

Earlier, in March 2009, they had also logged the area to build an embankment.

The protesters questioned the legality of the ownership of the delta area, claiming the delta was part of land that had been reclaimed dozens of years ago.

The Selayar Islands regency administration had earlier designated the delta as an urban forest and conservation area back in 2009, and it aims for the area to serve as a natural laboratory in the future.

“We believe there has been corrupt practices in the land purchase because a person cannot own a delta area and river,” said one of the protesters, Sirul Haq Nawawi.

“Besides, the government has designated it as an urban forest.

“The deforestation has damaged the environment at a time when the world is making efforts to prevent the impacts of global warming.”

The delta is home to around 10 varieties of mangrove trees, one of them endemic.

Asrahiyah said a section of the mangrove swamp had been grown and was tended to by local residents, while the others have existed for years.

Residents have also turned the delta into a mangrove seedling area.

Some of the seedlings have been grown in Selayar and others have been sold to augment their income.

Selayar Islands regency is currently home to 291 hectares of mangrove forest, but the number is declining.

More than 320 hectares of mangrove in the area had been converted into fish farms.

When confirmed, Selayar Islands Vice Regent Nursiyah Aroepala said her office had unsuccessfully tried to stop the businessman from felling the mangrove trees.

She said that the logging acti-vities continued with the owner insisting on his legal ownership of the delta.

“We deeply regretted the logging. We had asked the owner to stop felling the mangrove trees because the delta area is a conservation area and [the move] would threaten people’s lives.”

She claimed she was not in the regency when the logging activities took place.

She said her office had instructed district and village heads as well as the National Land Agency to investigate the delta’s legal status and stop the logging activities.

Head of Sulawesi, Maluku and Papua Regions Environment Management Center, Ridwan D. Tamin, promised that his office would check the report on the field.

He said if the mangrove deforestation did happen, it has violated the 2009 Law on Environment protection and management and the 1999 Law on forestry.

If proven guilty, the violator might get up to 10 years imprisonment and Rp 1 billion (US$108.000) in fines.

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

185 islets in W Sumatra given names

Antara News, Wednesday, January 27, 2010 04:44 WIB


Padang (ANTARA News) - West Sumatra Governor Marlis Rahman said 185 islets in the waters of the province had been given names as identity of ownership of the Indonesian people.


Most of the islets are unoccupied, he said in Padang Tuesday.


The small islands are located in the waters of seven regencies/cities, namely the cities of Padang and Pariaman, Pesisir Selatan, Padang Pariaman, Agam, Pasaman Barat and Mentawai Islands.


The names given to the islets are based on local terms, dialects and culture, he said.


Security and control are also carried out by empowering the fishermen operating near the small islands, he added.


He said the security and control are maintained by public supervisory groups.


Periodic control and supervision is also carried out by provincial, regency/city administration personnel and routine supervision by navy personnel.



Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Bringing the reefs back to life

Marcella Segre, Contributor The Jakarta Post, Gili Trawangan, West Nusa Tenggara | Tue, 01/12/2010 10:40 AM


Imagine diving off one of the beautiful shores of the Gili islands in Lombok, West Nusa Tenggara, and finding yourself facing fishermen equipped with dynamite and destroying the coral reef.

It would be far from picture perfect, but this was the reality before the Gili EcoTrust, a not-for-profit environmental organization, was set up in the area in 2002 and signed an agreement with fishermen a few years later in collaboration with the local Natural Resources Conservation Center (BKSDA).


The fish bombing has now ended, thanks to the action of the local protection and conservation officials. But there is a need to continue supporting the action to ensure fishermen no longer return to their old practice and damage the reefs.


Following joint efforts by officials, the Gili EcoTrust and the local dive centers, fishermen from Muroamy on the Gili islands are only allowed to fish in two designated areas.


They also receive a monthly compensation that will be considerably reduced if they are caught out of the designated areas or fishing with invasive methods such as dynamite and cyanide. The compensation system is funded by a fee collected by dive centers and has proved to be very successful.


“It was hard to convince the fishermen, but now our islands are more beautiful and more and more tourists come to the Gilis. It has benefited us all,” says Hari, a resident of Gili Air.


Through the years, the Gili EcoTrust has expanded its activities that now include a range of actions focused on the protection of the environment in the islands as a whole.


The group has a lot of work left to raise awareness among local people and tourists to reduce their environmental impact on a delicate ecosystem that has already been irreparably damaged.


Information boards have been placed all around Gili Trawangan and Gili Air to provide basic tips about eco-friendly behavior for taking a shower or walking on the beach.


In Gili Trawangan, a Clean-up Day is held every first Friday of the month, and students from the tourism school and Islamic school are given ecology classes.



Group effort: Divers take part in Biorock workshop to restore the reefs off the Gili islands in Lombok, West Nusa Tenggara. Thanks to these Biorock structures, the reefs are now undergoing a rapid restoration process.


The Gili EcoTrust is actively involved in the implementation of the Biorock project in the Gilis. Thanks to these Biorock structures, the reefs off the Gili islands are now undergoing a rapid restoration process. The structures are electrified steel structures allow mineral accretion and therefore speed up the process of growth of the pieces of coral attached to them.


To date, 33 structures have been put place to restore the coral reef, making the Gili islands the second-largest Biorock site in Indonesia after Pemuteran in Bali.


The Gili EcoTrust also hosts regular international workshops on Biorock technology. Participants learn every step of the installation of Biorock reefs: how to survey suitable sites in terms of the seabed, currents and waves; how to connect the cables; how to attach the coral and ensure the maintenance of the structures.


The workshops, organized in close collaboration with Mataram University, address worldwide participants, with emphasis given to teachers and students’ participation to ensure the project’s sustainability.


The Gili islands are also the testing ground for erosion-resistant Biorock structures.


It is one of the few sites in the world where the experimental structures have been placed. There are currently three such sites around Gili Trawangan.


“It’s not very nice to look at, but it’s working,” says dive master Seb.


“You can see them at low tide, sticking out of the water. It looks like a bunch of steel, cement and building material. But in only 10 months, the beach is already back.”


Young spirit: Local students do their part during the Clean-Up Day.

It is part of a more comprehensive erosion-resistance scheme on the islands, where land erosion is a real problem as the beach is fast disappearing.


In Gili Air, there have been attempts to counter the erosion by placing rubble or growing mangroves on the shores. Another technique introduced by the Gili EcoTrust is the planting of vetiver grass.


“This is the best and most sustainable method to preserve our beaches,” says Gili EcoTrust manager Delphine Robbe.


She says hotels and businesses tend to place sandbags or to build seawalls, which actually do not slow down the waves but deflect them, thus taking more and more sand off the beach.


The roots of vetiver grass can reach as deep as 5 meters, so it holds the sand much more effectively and also provides a more natural look.


The organization is now working to create a network with other environmental organizations, industries and businesses, such as by establishing eco-guidelines for their properties and collecting an “Eco fee” from guests. Recycled bags are also being printed and distributed in order to phase out plastic bags.


In Gili Trawangan, garbage is collected and brought to the dump in the middle of the island. A new incinerator will be built and a path made of recycled material leading to the dump is under construction.


“Rubbish is a major problem on all three islands,” Hari says. “There’s an urgent need to tackle the issue seriously.”


— Photos courtesy of Delphine Robbe