Empty Promises About Water Management

Translator

TEMPO

Editor

Laila Afifa

Jumat, 12 Juli 2024 07:41 WIB

TEMPO.CO, Jakarta - Large-scale nickel mining resulted in a clean water crisis in Weda Tengah. The government is busy with rhetoric and public relations.

The water crisis in Weda Tengah subdistrict, Central Halmahera, North Maluku, is a sharp illustration of the difference between rhetoric and the reality of environmental policy. How can promises about sustainable water management be realized if the government continues to grant mining concessions that damage the local ecosystem?

At the 10th World Water Forum in Bali on May 20, President Joko Widodo launched four Indonesian initiatives, including sustainable water management for small island nations. But never mind the people of other countries, even for the inhabitants of Weda Tengah, this initiative is like an unachievable dream.

Weda Tengah has been suffering from a clean water crisis for several years. It began at the same time as the start of operations by mining companies in the subdistrict. For example, the inhabitants of Lillie Sawai village, which is close to the Indonesia Weda Bay Industrial Park nickel ore smelter and refining area, are suffering the worst. Throughout the rainy season, waste from the mining ends up in their wells. As a result, the water from these wells can no longer be drunk.

It is not only the people of Lelilef Sawai that are suffering from a water crisis. Inhabitants of other villages such as Kobe, Kulo Jaya, Lelilef Waibulan, Sawai Itepo, Woejerana and Woekob are facing the same problem. There, river water has become contaminated and can no longer be used, meaning people have to rely on rainwater or buy bottled water from the town of Weda, which is 30 kilometers away.

Nickel mining in the 143,000-hectare area in Central Halmahera—almost 60 percent of the regency—has led to extraordinary environmental degradation. The mining has turned the forest into barren land and has caused the loss of water catchment areas. Tailings from the mines have contaminated rivers, leading to sedimentation and contamination by dangerous chemicals. Rivers that used to flow into Weda Bay, such as the Karkar, Woebem and Gwondi, are clogged with debris from the mines, and have almost disappeared.

Mining operations have also deprived local people of their livelihoods. Mining activities have displaced farmers and forced them to abandon their fields. Even fishers have to sail further from the coastline because there are no fish closer to the shore as a result of the contamination.

All of these disasters are a direct consequence of the economic policies of the Jokowi administration that prioritize sectors leading to economic growth, but ignore environmental and social considerations. The policy pushing for large-scale nickel mining, despite resulting in short-term economic benefits because of an increase in exports, carries the risk of long-term social and environmental damage.

The Indonesian government should not be satisfied simply with improving its image in the eyes of the international community. It is all very well for Indonesia to propose a World Lake Day and establish a center of excellence for water and climate security in the Asia Pacific region. But initiatives like this must be accompanied by concrete pro-environmental sustainability and pro-prosperity domestic policies. If not, any initiatives will feel empty, or will even be readily diverted into projects that only benefit officials and their business cronies.

Read the Complete Story in Tempo English Magazine

Related News

Indonesia's Retno Marsudi Appointed as UN Special Envoy on Water

2 hari lalu

Indonesia's Retno Marsudi Appointed as UN Special Envoy on Water

The UN Secretary-General appoints Indonesian Foreign Affairs Minister Retno Marsudi as his Special Envoy on Water.

Read More

Weak Conservation in Rhino Habitats

3 hari lalu

Weak Conservation in Rhino Habitats

The illegal trade in rhino horns continues even though it is often foiled. This is proof of the weak protection of rhinos in their habitats.

Read More

Transparency in the Selection of Supreme Court Justices

4 hari lalu

Transparency in the Selection of Supreme Court Justices

The DPR rejected all candidates for Supreme Court and ad hoc human rights justices put forward by the Judicial Commission.

Read More

Give and Take for Kaesang Pangarep

5 hari lalu

Give and Take for Kaesang Pangarep

There is increasingly compelling evidence of gratification in the form of a private jet for Kaesang Pangarep. The KPK could investigate this.

Read More

The Pope and the Irony of Our Leaders

6 hari lalu

The Pope and the Irony of Our Leaders

Pope Francis was enthusiastically welcomed on his visit to Indonesia.It was the simple journey of a religious leader and campaigner for social justice

Read More

How to Prevent Seasickness? Here are the Tips!

8 hari lalu

How to Prevent Seasickness? Here are the Tips!

Learn the best tips to prevent seasickness and enjoy your time on the water. Discover remedies and techniques for a comfortable journey.

Read More

The General's Role in Tin Corruption

10 hari lalu

The General's Role in Tin Corruption

The name of Brig. Gen. Mukti Juharsa is implicated in the tin corruption case. The Attorney General's Office must not be soft and slow.

Read More

Jokowi Receives Visit from Vale Indonesia Officials at Palace

11 hari lalu

Jokowi Receives Visit from Vale Indonesia Officials at Palace

President Jokowi received a visit from several officials of mining giant PT Vale Indonesia Tbk at the Presidential Palace in Jakarta on Sept. 5.

Read More

Police Brutality Against Demonstrators

12 hari lalu

Police Brutality Against Demonstrators

The police continue to resort to brutality to silence demonstrators. This is a violation of human rights.

Read More

Returning Politics to the People

13 hari lalu

Returning Politics to the People

The Constitutional Court returns politics to the people. But voters will once again be spectators of a banal political circus.

Read More