Sarawak: Bidayuh villagers set fire to logging camps, machinery

May 9, 2011
Res­i­dents from 10 Bidayuh vil­lagers this week set fire to five log­ging camps and thir­teen heavy machines in a stark protest against log­ging activ­i­ties on their land, in the Malaysian state of Sarawak.

May 9, 2011
Res­i­dents from 10 Bidayuh vil­lagers this week set fire to five log­ging camps and thir­teen heavy machines in a stark protest against log­ging activ­i­ties on their land, in the Malaysian state of Sarawak.

As report­ed by Free Malaysia Today, the Bidayuh vil­lagers took mat­ters into their own hands because of the gov­ern­ments refusal to address their com­plaints about log­ging activ­i­ties with­in their Native Cus­tom­ary Rights (NCR) land.

One vil­lage leader, who did not wish to be iden­ti­fied, explained to reporters that, “We have made sev­er­al reports to the author­i­ties and yet the log­ging activ­i­ties still continue[d],” adding that crops, fruit trees and land had already been destroyed by the activ­i­ties.

He also said that they warned the work­ers to stop what they were doing, but the work­ers ignored them, much like the gov­ern­ment. “We gave them ample time, and when they failed to adhere to our warn­ing, we have to take action,” he said.

Short­ly after the fire, an unnamed vil­lager was quot­ed as say­ing, “They have test­ed our patience and we just can­not take it any­more. We have lodged sev­er­al reports and com­plaints to the author­i­ties, but the log­ging activ­i­ties con­tin­ued. We are fed up. Our rights have been encroached, our crops destroyed.”

Dr. Christo­pher Kiyui of the Peo­ple’s Jus­tice Par­ty (PKR), who lost to Manyin in Sarawak’s recent elec­tion, told Radio Free Sarawak that 500 vil­lagers had “burnt 13 Cater­pil­lar and trac­tor machines and some lor­ries, around 10 in the morn­ing [of May 9th, 2011]. About 50 peo­ple came from each vil­lage.”

For­tu­nate­ly, no one was injured dur­ing the agi­ta­tion. Sim­i­lar­ly, no arrests have been made; how­ev­er the police did step in sev­er­al hours after the fires began. They just could­n’t do any­thing because they were so out­num­bered.

Lead­ing up to May 9th, the Bidayuh were already busy block­ing the access road used by the work­ers to defend their land. Local assem­bly rep­re­sen­ta­tive and state Infra­struc­ture Devel­op­ment and Com­mu­ni­ca­tions Min­is­ter Michael Manyin Jawong had also incensed the Bidayuh when he claimed that the pro­test­ers were mere­ly a group of “trou­ble mak­ers” who were “caus­ing a ruckus” to get some mon­ey from the log­ging com­pa­ny.

A spokesper­son for the com­mu­ni­ties said that Manyin was lying. The vil­lagers reject­ed the com­pa­ny’s intru­sion, he said, because “our NCR land and our jun­gle… are our ances­tral prop­er­ties.” Prop­er­ties that the Bidayuh clear­ly want to pro­tect.

Agi­ta­tions such as these are few and far in between, but have occurred in oth­er parts of the world. In 2009, for instance, the Maya report­ed­ly burned equip­ment at a gold mine in Guatemala; and the Lep­cha took action against the Panan hydel pow­er project in Sikkim, India. Sim­i­lar­ly, in 2008, the Enawene Nawe com­plete­ly lev­elled a hydro dam con­struc­tion site in Brazil.

Gov­ern­ments and Indus­try spokesper­sons tried to dis­miss these actions as mere van­dal­ism, as if Indige­nous Peo­ples have noth­ing bet­ter to do than trash pri­vate prop­er­ty. But the fact is, with more than 5,000 indus­tri­al projects tak­ing place on Indige­nous lands around the world, it’s no won­der it does­n’t hap­pen more often.

Espe­cial­ly since the stakes are so high. Com­pa­nies may offer a few short term jobs and maybe even free bub­ble gum for the kids, but Indige­nous peo­ple face the deple­tion of their water sup­ply, the destruc­tion of their food sources, the loss of their cul­tur­al prop­er­ty and the over­all dev­as­ta­tion of their home­lands.

The bur­den is sim­ply too great for any­one to car­ry.