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Heart of Borneo editorial

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Dear Friends of the Orangutan,

Here is a moving editorial from the Jakarta Post

calling for the protection of the Heart Of Borneo.

Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation (BOS)is a key

player in the conservation of this key area, and we

hope to have your support in these endeavours.

 

Michelle Desilets, BOS UK

 

" Nature's gift

" Unforgivable! " Such was the remark of Heart of Borneo

national coordinator Bambang Supriyanto on the

destruction of pristine forest on the world's third

largest island.

No expression could be more apt to describe the

annihilation of some of the most unique creatures on

earth as a result of man's reckless ways.

As if we needed further reminding of the wondrous

bounty God has left in our care, a conference in

Leiden, the Netherlands, last week announced the

discovery of hundreds of new species in Kalimantan

(Borneo).

During the conference a new report titled Borneo's

Lost World: Newly Discovered Species was released,

highlighting the findings of an international project

under the aegis of the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) at a

22 million-hectare highland plateau known as the Heart

of Borneo.

According to the report, among the discoveries were

260 new insect species, 50 new plants, 30 kinds of

freshwater fish, seven types of frog, six types of

lizard, two newly discovered snakes and one previously

unknown species of toad. Various other scientific

information was also gathered during the project, such

as genetic information concerning the orangutan.

About three-quarters of the island of Borneo is

Indonesian territory, and we can only express our

gratitude for the efforts of the WWF, the

international scientific community and sponsors of the

project to detail how blessed we are with nature's

wonders. It is a task that Indonesia by itself could

not accomplish.

Due to a lack of funding, limited know-how and the

plain absence of the political will to accomplish such

endeavors, many of our natural marvels remain

undiscovered.

Be that as it may, there is a more lasting and no less

important obligation that we must perform as a

follow-up to the WWF project. Our task now is to

protect and preserve nature against our own

destructive egos and greed.

One cannot say enough about the worrying rate of

deforestation in this country. Satellite photos show

that between 1985 and 2001 over 55 percent of lowland

forest in Kalimantan was destroyed. This destruction

continues at an accelerated pace with illegal logging

and the conversion of forests into plantations.

For now, most of the highland forest in the Heart of

Borneo remains untouched. But there is no guarantee it

will remain safe from human disturbance unless we

persistently recommit ourselves to protecting our

natural heritage.

We take so much from the earth, while all that it

really asks of us is to ensure its preservation. As

generations of agrarian families have come to

understand, the more one cares for the land the more

nature will yield its bounty for our benefit.

Throughout Indonesia we find natural products that are

said to contain wondrous medicinal benefits. If only

we could properly catalog, research and cultivate

these products, one could only imagine the

alternatives available to high-priced medicines.

One such craze at the moment is the popular Red Fruit

(pandanus conoideus) found in Papua. The fruit itself

is found throughout the island, but the fruit grown in

the Wamena highlands is said to be the best for curing

various maladies.

While the WWF project in Borneo found hundreds of new

species, let us think for a moment about the dozens of

species (and perhaps more) that have perished over the

decades as a result of our negligence.

Environmental awareness should no longer be an

extracurricular subject for our young; it must become

a core subject as important as the arts and science.

Negligence toward the environment also has immediate

political and economic consequences. An increasing

number of our natural products that have medicinal

qualities are being patented by foreigners.

Traditional home cures using herbal concoctions are

being analyzed and synthesized.

While we support the use of these natural remedies to

cure and soothe ailments worldwide, we should also be

wary lest we one day arrive at the point where we

could be economically liable if we, without

permission, used natural products that originated in

Indonesia.

It is time to remind ourselves once again of our

obligation to nature and to our grandchildren, who

will inherit a bounteous earth or suffer from our

present deeds.

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detaileditorial.asp?fileid=20050507.E01

 

 

Michelle Desilets

BOS UK

www.savetheorangutan.org.uk

www.savetheorangutan.info

" Primates Helping Primates "

 

Please sign our petition to rescue over 100 smuggled orangutans in Thailand:

http://www.thePetitionSite.com/takeaction/822035733

 

 

 

 

 

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