(Malaysia) Indigenous blockade expands against massive dam in Sarawak

Indige­nous peo­ple have expand­ed their block­ade against the Murum dam in the Malaysian state of Sarawak, tak­ing over an addi­tion­al road to pre­vent con­struc­tion mate­ri­als from reach­ing the dam site. Begin­ning on Sep­tem­ber 26th with 200 Penan peo­ple, the block­ade has boomed to well over 300. Groups now occu­py not just the main route to the dam site, but an alter­na­tive route that the dam’s con­trac­tor, the Chi­na-locat­ed Three Gorges Project Cor­po­ra­tion, had begun to use.

“The major works on the con­struc­tion of the dam have been par­a­lyzed over the last one week. The dri­vers have left home and let their cement tankers, lor­ry trucks and trail­ers with build­ing mate­ri­als had been hauled over and park at the road side near the block­ade site,” the Sarawak Con­ser­va­tion Alliance for Nat­ur­al Envi­ron­ment (SCANE) said in an update on the block­ade. “The access to the con­struc­tion site of Murum hydro­elec­tric dam project is total­ly blocked on all direc­tions with the set­ting-up of sec­ond road block­ade by the Penans.”

The Penan are protest­ing what they say has been dis­dain­ful treat­ment from the gov­ern­ment-owned cor­po­ra­tion over­see­ing the 900 megawatt dam project, Sarawak Ener­gy Berhad (SEB). The dams con­struc­tion, which will inun­date 24,500 hectares of native land, will lead to the invol­un­tary reset­tle­ment of sev­en indig­neous com­mu­ni­ties, who still remain in the dark about many of the details of the reset­tle­ment plan. In addi­tion, the tribe alleges that SEB has been inten­tion­al­ly destroy­ing impor­tant sacred and his­tor­i­cal sites.

“We will not remove the block­ade or move out of here until our demands are resolved and ful­filled by the gov­ern­ment,” Labang Paneh, a rep­re­sen­ta­tive from Long Wat vil­lage, said in a state­ment.

Fam­i­lies, includ­ing elder­ly and chil­dren, have set up makeshift camps near the block­ade and appear to be in it for the long haul.

A gov­ern­ment min­is­ter spent two days with the Penan inves­ti­gat­ing the block­ade and speak­ing with them about their griev­ances.

“I went in and I saw the sit­u­a­tion from the view of these Penans whose lives are being uproot­ed and whose future looks so uncer­tain,” Liwan Lagang, Sarawak Assis­tant Min­is­ter for Cul­ture and Her­itage, told The Star. “I found out that indeed, they had not been prop­er­ly con­sult­ed and their con­cerns not addressed by those han­dling the con­struc­tion of the project.”

For decades the Penan peo­ple have seen their cus­tom­ary forests felled for log­ging, plan­ta­tions, dams, roads, and oth­er big infra­struc­ture projects with the Sarawak gov­ern­ment refus­ing to rec­og­nize their land rights. Tra­di­tion­al­ly, the Penan were nomadic hunter-and-gath­er­ers, but today most live in set­tled vil­lages, but still depend on the forests for their liveli­hood.

Assis­tant Min­is­ter Lagang added that “con­trac­tors involved in the dam project are mak­ing mil­lions of ring­git in the project. They must be con­sid­er­ate and exer­cise bet­ter social cor­po­rate respon­si­bil­i­ty and good pub­lic rela­tions with the local affect­ed natives.”

Sarawak already pro­duces far more ener­gy than the state uses lead­ing crit­ics to allege that numer­ous mas­sive dam projects are mere­ly means for cor­rupt offi­cials to siphon off state funds and col­lect bribes. The state recent­ly com­plet­ed the 2,400 megawatt Bakun Dam, which pro­duces dou­ble the ener­gy con­sumed by Sarawak dur­ing peak times. Bakun result­ed in the forced reset­tle­ment of 10,000 peo­ple.