Indonesian timber corruption hits poor

Published: Nov. 30, 2009 at 4:55 PM

JAKARTA, Nov. 30 (UPI) -- Indonesia's forest industry is rife with corruption, a human rights group says, costing the country $2 billion a year with devastating effect on its rural poor.

Half of all Indonesian timber harvested from 2003 through 2006 was logged illegally, with no taxes paid, Human Rights Watch said Monday.

The impact of continuing corruption and lost revenue on the rural population is significant, a report from the group said.

The annual lost revenue is equal to the country's entire spending on healthcare, the report said.

"It's a particularly cruel irony that in many of the rural areas that generate the country's forestry income, basic health care services are among the worst in the country," Joe Saunders, Human Rights Watch program director, said. "People who live next door to the very forests being ravaged to line officials' pockets must travel huge distances to reach the nearest doctor."

Those who profit most from illegal logging are seldom held accountable, the report found, because of widespread government corruption.

The forest areas of Indonesia are among the largest in the world, but the country also has one of the highest deforestation rates. Exports from the lucrative timber industry totaled $6.6 billion in 2007.

© 2009 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Any reproduction, republication, redistribution and/or modification of any UPI content is expressly prohibited without UPI's prior written consent.

Order reprints



Additional News Stories
Canada faces must-win in hockey (26 min)
Your Daily Horoscope (56 min)
The almanac
Empty Nest: Music-making with Riley!
Texas evidence barred from Ariz. trial
Alaska mulls new ethics rules post-Palin
Md. report optimistic about wind power
fark
47-year old teacher facing jail for going topless for teen (with non-topless pic)
Stephen Colbert: "Sarah Palin is a f*cking retard"
Photoshop this artificial appendage
Illegal immigration dropped 7 percent last year on news that US sucks almost as much as Mexico these...
Thanks to union contracts, a Madison, Wisconsin bus driver earned $159,258 last year. Step to the...
Woman charged with impersonation. Of Jabba The Hutt, apparently