Tag: Indonesia

  • Local Voluteer Group Plans To Go After Firms Involved In Causing Haze

    Local Voluteer Group Plans To Go After Firms Involved In Causing Haze

    As the season of haze returns to our shores, some Singaporeans may feel helpless about the smoky, unhealthy air blown our way from the south.

    But a group of volunteers are determined to take up the fight against the haze, or those who had a hand in causing it.

    The Haze Elimination Action Team (Heat), led by Professor Ang Peng Hwa of Nanyang Technological University’s Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information, is planning to sue and boycott the companies responsible for the fires.

    Yesterday morning, PSI levels crossed into the hazardous range. At 6am, the 24-hour PSI was 257-318, and the three-hour PSI stood at 334.

    Prof Ang told The New Paper yesterday: “We want consumers to know that there is something that we can do. We are not helpless.”

    He and a few others set up Heat in 2007 – a year after Singapore experienced its worst haze in a decade, with the Pollutant Standards Index (PSI) peaking at 150.

    “What struck me most back then was when I read about a 40-year-old CEO who said how Singaporeans can’t do anything about the haze.

    “This was a man empowered and in charge of a company, yet he was feeling helpless. I told myself that surely there was something we can do,” he said.

    In 2007, Heat raised about $20,000 for a website and an educational effort in Jambi, South Sumatra.

    Today, the group has about 800 members who include professionals, housewives and students.

    It is also working with another haze awareness group, PM.Haze.

    Prof Ang said that Heat intends to sue and boycott companies that are registered here but are involved, via intermediary or subsidiary companies, in starting the fires in Indonesia.

    It is also “looking for someone or an organisation that has incurred losses of at least tens of thousand dollars or more due the haze”, or who has been hospitalised, to be an “ideal plaintiff”, he said.

    Legal fees are estimated between $50,000 and $100,000 and the team is looking to get pro bono help as well as a lawyer with experience in corporate forensics to help trace the ownership pattern of the fires, he said.

    Singapore Management University law don Eugene Tan said that this was an encouraging effort at self-help by Heat, but added that it would be a challenging task.

    TOUGH TO PROVE

    Firstly, there is the evidential burden of proof that these local companies have management control of the Indonesian companies that are legally responsible for the haze, he said.

    Heat would then need to provide evidence to the court that these Indonesian entities were indeed causing the haze pollution, he said.

    But he noted that this bottom-up approach, if successful, would hit the alleged companies where it hurts the most – their reputations and profits.

    “It will send a signal to these companies to clean up their act. It can pressure Singaporean entities to insist on sustainable and responsible agricultural practices throughout their supply chains.

    “It’s a case of consumers having a big say in how a company ought to conduct itself and being responsible to stakeholders,” he said.

    Environment and Water Resources Minister Vivian Balakrishnan said during a press conference yesterday that the Transboundary Haze Pollution Act, which was passed in Parliament last year, will help those seeking legal action against those responsible for causing or condoning fires if burning results in unhealthy levels of haze in Singapore.

    “Whenever possible, we will try to share as much information as possible with the public. I think they are entitled to take action. I think our demands for greater transparency and sharing of information will facilitate their action. Anyone who suffers losses as a result of this may be entitled to take action against errant companies pursuant to (the Act).”

    Dr Balakrishnan also listed five companies that the National Environmental Agency has issued notices to. (See report,)

    Prof Ang said the case could take years to build and is aware of the challenges ahead.

    One of their plans is to gather pictures of the sites that are burning now and check back on these sites in a few years.

    “We hope then to trace who benefited from these fires. To the companies suspected of starting fires, we are coming after you,” he said.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Singaporeans Robbed Staying At Jimbaran Seaview Villa, Police And Villa Staff Suspected To Be In Cahoots

    Singaporeans Robbed Staying At Jimbaran Seaview Villa, Police And Villa Staff Suspected To Be In Cahoots

    So glad to be back in Singapore and out of Bali. This incident in our villa in Bali has to be made known even though I do not usually post about such matters on my social media platforms. For the safety of everyone, please share our experience. We booked this villa via @agoda.

    DO NOT stay at Jimbaran Seaview Villa

    Yesterday, we found out that some of our money (~SGD1000 worth) was missing. When we asked the security, helpers and butlers who were staying in the villa with us the entire time, all of them (obviously) denied that they had stolen our money.

    When we talked to the villa’s manager Ms Ari Wartini, not only did she blindly sided her staff she also raised her voice at us and was being very rude. She was also very quick to respond by asking us to claim insurance and threatened us that there is no point reporting police because she’s “good friends” with them and if we blow the matter up, we “may not be able to leave this country”. It is their modus operandi – to trick unsuspecting tourists to their villa and work collectively to steal from them then gang up and threaten you with their “good relations” with the police.

    On advice of a local Balinese, we packed up quickly and left for a hotel as the situation could become dangerous for us due to the dilapidated and not easily accessible location where the villa is situated.

    We were also unable to make a police report despite heading to THREE DIFFERENT POLICE STATIONS. We don’t know why but it seemed that they are pre-informed about rejecting our case via our driver (who was from the villa).

    We highly suspect that this has happened before so please share with your friends and do not stay at Jimbaran Seaview Villa for your own safety.

     

    Source: Tricia Ong

  • Indonesia: 1 Month Needed To Fight Fires

    Indonesia: 1 Month Needed To Fight Fires

    Indonesia will take 30 days to bring smouldering forest fires under control, the national disaster management agency said on Friday (Sept 18), as smog from the fires pushes pollution in Southeast Asia to record highs.

    The region has suffered for years from annual bouts of smog caused by slash-and-burn practices in Indonesia’s islands of Sumatra and Kalimantan, but governments have failed to tackle the problem.

    “We expect there will be a potential for haze because of the El Nino effect until the end of November, but we are targeting to put out the majority of the fires by mid-October,” agency spokesman Sutopo Nugroho told Reuters.

    Indonesia has faced criticism from neighbours and green groups for not doing enough to prevent the fires, which cause millions of dollars worth of damage to health and the environment every year.

    This week, Indonesia said it was investigating about 100 companies, including an unnamed Malaysian firm, in the latest crackdown to tackle smog worsened by a prolonged dry season. The rainy season usually begins in November.

    Next week, authorities will name several companies likely to face sanctions for starting fires, including possible withdrawal of licenses, Indonesia’s environment and forestry minister, Siti Nurbaya Bakar, told a news conference on Friday.

    Meanwhile, Malaysia on Friday announced plans to evacuate 173 of its citizens “badly affected by the haze surrounding Riau province”from provincial capital Pekanbaru, using two C-130 Hercules aircraft.

    Plantation companies, some of which are listed in Singapore, and smallholder farmers often get blamed for using slash-and-burn practices to clear land for palm oil and agriculture.

    Indonesian law allows smallholders to slash and burn up to 2ha of land, according to the disaster management agency, which has said the policy is being misused.

    Asia Pulp and Paper (APP), one of the world’s biggest pulp and paper companies, says it is fighting fires on its large concession areas and that thousands of hectares of its plantations have been destroyed.

    “We are just seeing the tip of the iceberg here. El Nino will last until March next year,” Aida Greenbury, managing director of sustainability at APP, told Reuters.

    Indonesia has deployed nearly 3,000 troops and 24 aircraft to help fight the fires. Bakar said an offer of assistance from Singapore was turned down.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Indonesia VP Jusuf Kalla To Singapore: Please Help To Tackle Haze

    Indonesia VP Jusuf Kalla To Singapore: Please Help To Tackle Haze

    Indonesian Vice-President Jusuf Kalla has invited the Singapore Government to help resolve the haze crisis in Sumatra and Kalimantan, according to a report by SCTV’s Liputan6 television news programme.

    “Singapore is ready to help. So, I think, please do … because Singapore als knows that a natural disaster can happen anywhere,” he was quoted as saying on Tuesday (Sep 15).

    “Singapore please come and tackle the haze because the effect is also felt by Singapore. We, not to mention Singapore, dislike (the haze). Everyone dislikes it and we have put in extra effort to tackle the fires,” Mr Kalla added.

    His comments came after Singapore’s Ministry of Defence confirmed that Jakarta accepted the Singapore Armed Forces’ offer to send C-130s for cloud seeding and Chinooks for large water buckets to douse fires, only to decline it later.

    Indonesian President Joko Widodo subsequently ordered the mobilisation of hundreds more troops and enforcement officers to tackle the forest fires which have caused air quality to reach hazardous levels in Riau.

    Mr Kalla had previously criticised Indonesia’s neighbours for complaining about annual transboundary haze caused by Sumatra forest fires. “For 11 months, they enjoyed nice air from Indonesia and they never thanked us. They have suffered because of the haze for one month and they get upset,” he said in March.

    On Tuesday, the vice-president stressed that firm action would be taken against those involved in land and forest fires, and said sanctions would be meted out accordingly, reported Liputan6.

    Mr Widodo also pledged this week to crack down on companies and individuals behind the fires. “The president’s instruction is clear – law enforcement must be firm so that this will not happen again next year,” national police chief Badrodin Haiti told reporters late Wednesday.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Vivian Balakrishnan: Cloud Seeding Rumours Are False, Malicious

    Vivian Balakrishnan: Cloud Seeding Rumours Are False, Malicious

    Rumours that cloud seeding is taking place to induce rain ahead of the Singapore Grand Prix are false, Minister for Environment and Water Resources Dr Vivian Balakrishnan said.

    Addressing a WhatsApp message that has been making the rounds in Singapore, Dr Balakrishnan posted on Facebook on Thursday (Sep 17): “The National Environment Agency does not engage in cloud seeding and has no plans to do so. Singapore is so small that even if anybody tried to do it, the rain would almost certainly fall outside Singapore.”

    He added: “Singaporeans should beware of malicious people spreading false rumours during a period when anxieties are heightened.”

    The original WhatsApp message called for people to be wary of what it claimed were “chemically-induced rain showers”, purportedly meant to reduce haze levels in light of the coming Formula 1 race, which will be held on roads in Singapore’s Civic District from Sep 18 to 20.

    You may have seen this making the rounds. It is untrue.NEA does not engage in cloud seeding and has no plans to do so….

    Posted by Vivian Balakrishnan on Wednesday, September 16, 2015

     

    Singapore has been blanketed by haze caused by forest fires in neighbouring Indonesia. The 3-hour Pollutant Standards Index (PSI) hit two-year highs earlier in September, with readings crossing 200. They have dipped below 100 in the past two days.

    AIR QUALITY TO REMAIN MODERATE: NEA

    In an advisory released on Thursday, the National Environment Agency (NEA) said that hazy conditions in Singapore have eased further as prevailing winds continue to blow from the southeast. As at 1pm, the 24-hour PSI was 76 to 96, in the Moderate range.

    For the next 12 hours, the 24-hour PSI is expected to be in the high end of the Moderate range, but may enter the low end of the Unhealthy range if unfavourable winds blow in haze from Sumatra, the agency added.

    NEA reiterated that the health impact of the haze is dependent on a person’s health status, the PSI level, and the length and intensity of outdoor activity.

    “Reducing outdoor activities and physical exertion can help limit the ill effects from haze exposure,” said the NEA. “Given the air quality forecast for the next 24 hours, healthy persons should reduce prolonged or strenuous outdoor physical exertion.”

    “The elderly, pregnant women and children should minimise prolonged or strenuous outdoor physical exertion, while those with chronic lung or heart disease should avoid prolonged or strenuous outdoor physical exertion,” NEA added.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com