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A 1991 Penan blockade in its seventh
week. It was maintained for another seven
weeks before being dismantled by armed
riot police (from Davis, 1995, p. 137).
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The First Wave
The first blockes
in Sarawak came in 1987. For a number of years, indigenous leaders had been
trying to reason with loggers and the government by signing petitions and applying
for logging licenses themselves. When their efforts continued to be ignored,
the Penan took action: on March 31st, 1987, they constructed the first of a
series of blockades along a logging road in the Tutoh River basin. In two months,
activities in sixteen logging camps had ground to a halt.
Other groups were
heartened by this initial success. By October 1987, Penan, Kayan and Kelabit
communities had blockaded roads at twenty-three different sites in the Baram
and Limbang areas (1). The blockades received international
media coverage, and drew support from all over the world. For example, the European
parliament adopted a resolution calling for a suspension on Malaysian timber
imports (2). The situation became a great embarrassment
for the Malaysian government, and it launched a crackdown, arresting hundreds
of people.
The next wave of
blockades began in 1989. On September 10th, indigenous peoples from nineteen
communities built twelve barricades in the Upper Limbang and Baram regions,
and on October 5, eleven Iban communities blockaded areas in the Bintulu district
(3). Blockades continued off and on for the next several
years.
On March 23, 1993,
Penan communities in the upper Baram started a massive blockade, in which over
a thousand men, women and children participated. This standoff lasted for six
months, during which nine Penan died of sickness and hunger. Finally, on September
28, three hundred soldiers, police, forestry officials and logging company employees
attacked the barricade with tear gas and bulldozers, and managed to dismantle
it (4).
But by 1993, such blockades were already unusual. International coverage and
assistance had long since waned. Most were discouraged by a lack of success.
Blockades leave one vulnerable to heavy handed government tactics, and because
they keep a number of people in a village from procuring food, they cannot be
sustained forever. The longest blockade has lasted nine months.
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This blockade in 2000 dramatically
shows how blockades can stop
the logging trucks.
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The Second Wave
Despite the drawbacks to blockading, there has been a resurgence starting around
1999. This is mostly due to a growing desparation, and a lack of alternatives.
This is especially true of the Penan. While other ethnic groups have found some
success in the courts fighting for their land rights (as will be mentioned later),
the Penan don't have the same legal standing, due to their history as nomads.
They also are more dependent on the forest to survive, and thus have more to
lose when the forests are destroyed.
Recent blockades have often lacked the numbers and support of the first wave,
but on the other hand the government is also not responding with tear gas and
mass arrests as they once did. Perhaps this is due to Malaysia's desire to have
their logs certified as "eco-timber". Whether this gives some breathing
space to the Penan and others remains to be seen.
Continue
to Part 6 - Bakun Dam and Oil Palm Plantations
Return
to Part 4 - Current Issues: Logging
1. Davis, Wade;
Mackenzie, Ian & Kennedy, Shane. Nomads of the Dawn. The Penan of the Borneo
Rainforest. California: Pomegranate Artbooks, 1995, p. 130.
2. Parry, Richard Lloyd. The Hunt for Bruno Manser. Independent on Sunday (London).
23 Sept 2001.
3. Davis, p. 134.
4. Davis, p. 137.
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