Contemporary politics,local and international current affairs, science, music and extracts from the Queensland Newspaper "THE WORKER" documenting the proud history of the Labour Movement.
MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
Saturday, 22 April 2017
David Attenborough’s ‘Guardian headline’ halts Borneo bridge
Conservationist denounced Sukau project as a threat to pygmy elephants and orangutans
Old friends: David Attenborough with orangutans in 1982.
Photograph: Rex
Officials in Borneo have cancelled plans to build a bridge across the
Kinabatangan river, after warnings from Sir David Attenborough and
other conservationists that it would gravely endanger pygmy elephants,
orangutans and many other jungle species. The news comes just weeks
after the Guardian revealed Attenborough’s opposition to the project.
Attenborough originally sent a private letter to the chief minister
of the state of Sabah, Musa Aman, in September 2016. Last month, with
signs pointing to the bridge still going ahead, the Guardian published
excerpts from the letter. The authorities in Borneo have described
Attenborough’s now-public opposition as the final blow to the project.
“I am immensely pleased to hear that plans to build a bridge at Sukau
have been cancelled,” said Attenborough, who is a patron of the World Land Trust,
which has saved forest in the Kinabatangan area. “This region is
recognised worldwide as being a vital enclave for threatened wildlife,
and it is indeed good news that the safe passage of orangutans, pygmy
elephants and other endangered wildlife will not be threatened by the
bridge and all that would have come with it. The decision will [also
benefit] the local people who welcome visitors who come to see the
wonderful biodiversity of their forests.”
Datuk Sam Mannan, Sabah Forestry Department’s chief conservator,
announced the state government’s decision on 19 April at a dinner in
London held by the South East Asia Rainforest Research Partnership.
“That headline broke the camel’s back,” Mannan said of the Guardian’s
coverage. “It made us understand that the issue of a proposed bridge
across a protected area for wildlife is now the number one environmental
concern not just in Sabah, but globally too.”
A Borneo pygmy elephant in tall grasses near the Kinabatangan river. Photograph: Alamy
The bridge would have spanned 350m, linking the village of Sukau with
Litang and Tommanggong. While many locals supported it as a means to
improve travel in the region, conservationists feared it would further
imperil wildlife. Sukau is adjacent to the Kinabatangan Wildlife Sanctuary, which is a popular eco-tourism site. Attenborough himself has visited the region several times.
Over the years the sanctuary has been hemmed in by spreading palm oil
plantations, which have fragmented forests and blocked migratory routes
for wildlife. Bornean elephants – the world’s smallest – are considered
endangered by the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, with a global population of only around 1,500. Bornean orangutans are listed as critically endangered. As they have lost their habitat, both species have seen increased run-ins with humans, including poachings and poisonings.
The conservationist and wildlife presenter Steve Backshall, who also
attacked the bridge plans, described the Kinabatangan forest as “one of
the single most important pieces of rainforest on Earth”.
Last weekend, Backshall and his wife, Olympic champion rower Helen Glover, kayaked 125 miles along the Thames to raise funds for the World Land Trust’s work in the area.
“It’s a narrow wildlife corridor, allowing dispersal of a myriad of
species big and small,” Blackshall said. “Fragmenting of this habitat –
already beleaguered by ever-encroaching plantations – would be
catastrophic. The decision to halt the Sukau bridge is a reason for
great celebration.”
Experts have said there are alternatives to the bridge, including
building further downstream or improving existing infrastructure.
“The chief minister of Sabah has taken everyone’s views into
consideration – including Sir David’s – before deciding on this very
important issue, and I am pleased to say that balanced development has
prevailed,” Mannan said. The Guardian is covering elephant conservation for a year; email us on elephant.conservation@guardian.co.uk.
No comments:
Post a Comment