Collective
land rights
for
sustainable, prosperous Indonesia
Nurdiana Darus and William
Sabandar ;
Nurdiana
Darus and William Sabandar serve as deputy of technology, systems and
monitoring, and deputy of operations, respectively, at BP REDD+, the National
REDD+ Agency
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JAKARTA
POST, 02 Januari 2015
The
government inaugurated on Sept. 1 last year the National Program for the
Protection and Recognition of Indigenous Peoples (PPMHA) through the
country’s Reducing Emissions for Deforestation and Degradation Plus (REDD+)
program.
Indonesia’s
REDD+ program understands social equity as key to successfully tackling
climate change. The recognition of collective indigenous land rights provides
communities with a critical asset base — land — for poverty alleviation and
sustainable development.
This is vital
to protecting our forests, biodiversity and our future. Indigenous peoples
across the world have proven to be sustainable stewards to vast, but rapidly
dwindling, forests. While agricultural, logging, mining and other pressures
have challenged their ability to sustainably manage the forests they rely on,
the PPMHA looks to reverse this trend.
One first
step is to clarify indigenous territories and related tenure rights. A second
is to strengthen local resources for green development and service provision,
providing alternative livelihood opportunities. This enables sustainable
forest management in a manner that supports increased household incomes.
Lack of
clarity in land tenure and rights poses one of Indonesia’s biggest
development and conservation challenges. Seasonal fires, food insecurity and
chronic difficulties in securing land for infrastructure development are only
some examples.
Part of this
is due to poor coherence over land jurisdiction. The REDD+ agenda is tackling
this through the One Map Initiative.
Another part
is the legacy of a deeply inequitable past where, contrary to the 1945
Constitution, state forest management supported lucrative short-term but
unsustainable exploitation. This meant a few benefited enormously, at the
expense of the 30,000 villages — over one-third of all villages — that rely
directly on healthy forests, peatlands and ecosystems for their well-being.
On May 16,
2013, Indonesia’s Constitutional Court delivered a ruling that righted this
historical wrong by reverting rights over indigenous forests back to
indigenous peoples. The PPMHA was devised to translate this ruling into
reality.
___________
Indigenous
peoples have been an important part of conversations and efforts to find
equitable solutions for transmigrant.
As we
approach the ruling’s second anniversary, much critical work to implement the
changes needs to be completed.
There remains
no clear official pathway to delineate and register collective indigenous
land claims. The National REDD+ Agency and partners are working to rectify
this. Pioneering communities, regencies and provinces are currently piloting
official recognition of adat (customary tenure rights) in seven provinces
across the archipelago.
This includes
efforts to recognize the tenure rights of the Punan people conducting
community mapping in Malinau, North Kalimantan; local governments such as
Jayapura in Papua have leveraged their own budgets for community mapping.
Provincial
governments such that in as Jambi are working toward province-wide
recognition of indigenous peoples, and advocates including the Indigenous
People’s Alliance of the Archipelago (AMAN), the Community and
Ecological-based Society for Legal Reform (HuMa), the Indonesian Forum for
the Environment (Walhi), the National Participatory Mapping Working Network
(JKPP) and countless others are working tirelessly to hold the government
accountable for the improved welfare of all Indonesians.
One obstacle remains
on how community maps can be accommodated within the government system to
enable and affirm collective land claims. As a temporary solution, the
National REDD+ Agency will serve as the data custodian. The agency welcomes
the continued clarification of the institutional roles for the finalization
of all areas associated with the PPMHA.
On the
macro-level, recognizing adat and strengthening social equity also makes
economic sense. Lack of clarity over land rights and tenurial conflict
inhibit efficient development of critical infrastructure for the country.
Cases from
across ASEAN, including Indonesia, demonstrate that clarifying land tenure
reduces conflict, risks and their associated losses. In addition, Indonesia’s
smallholders — representing approximately 17 million individuals — remain a
key constituency for boosting yields and productivity, and producing higher
value-added crops. These are comparative advantages our neighbors in Malaysia
and Thailand already enjoy.
As we work
toward recognition of adat (customary law) territories and developing
collective land-titling mechanisms, we must ensure hidden inequities are not
entrenched, and that empowerment does not transfer the burden of
marginalization.
This means
strengthening the critical role of women and their access to land and natural
resources within communal land management. It means empowering indigenous
peoples to be solution seekers, to share in the enjoyment of rights and also
the responsibilities of supporting the enjoyment of these rights by all
Indonesians.
Indigenous
peoples have been and continue to be an important part of conversations and
efforts to find equitable solutions for transmigrant and other local
communities.
It’s true
that we continue to have difficult choices ahead to realize the Indonesia
envisioned in our 1945 Constitution; an Indonesia that is just and
prosperous, whose peoples are equal before the eyes of the law, united as
much by our commitment to protect this reality as we are by the diversity and
differences we display in the languages we speak, the environments we live in
and the ways we worship.
But as an
increasingly robust democracy, our capacity to enable this long-promised
reality is driven by our knowledge that the gains made will benefit all of us.
In parallel,
the world is moving from the Millennium Development Goals to pursuing a
post-2015 agenda. Indonesia’s work is being highlighted on an international
platform.
The human
rights and social justice agenda came to the fore at this year’s global
climate negotiations, the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)
Conference of Parties 20 (COP 20) in Lima, Peru. The REDD+ program is
committed to helping ensure that Indonesia continues to provide tangible
examples of sustainable and equitable development to the world. ●
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