APP mega mill supplier faces community protests over land rights | Land Portal

Community groups in South Sumatra are protesting against Asia Pulp & Paper's planned choice of timber supplier for its massive new pulp and tissue mill, which they say used the army and police to intimidate them during a public consultation over land use.


Community groups have launched a protest against one of the suppliers to Asia Pulp and Paper’s (APP) new mill in South Sumatra, Indonesia, accusing the company of using intimidation tactics during a public consultation over land rights. 


Indonesia’s largest paper and pulp company is planning to use PT. Bangun Rimba Sejahtera (BRS) as a fiber supplier for its new US$2.6 million Ogan Komering Ilir (OKI) mill, but community groups have objected to their land being used for BRS’s plantations, and are being backed by Indonesian NGOs Forest Peoples Programme, Hutan Kita Institute, Walhi Bangka Belitung and Rainforest Action Network.


The plantations would supply a mill - one of the largest in the world - expected to generate 2.8 million tonnes of pulp per year.


The community groups claim they were intimidated during a public consultation session, when the company brought in the police and army, according to a report from Indonesian environmental groups released in English on Thursday. 


News that the mega-mill had quietly started operations at the start of this year prompted an outcry from NGOs. They said that the mill would mean that APP would violate the zero-deforestation pledge it made in 2013, damage Indonesia’s carbon-rich peatlands, and lead to more fires that have shrouded Southeast Asia in toxic haze for decades.


Now, community groups from the province of Bangka Belitung in South Sumatra are planning to protest the use of their lands by BRS for timber plantations. They have written letters and petitions to government officials to voice their opposition, and placed protest banners around the area.


BRS’s plans to supply fibre to the OKI mill could affect 100,000 people who live in and around the concession area, 15 per cent of which is covered by forest, and is farmed for a mixture of wild sweet honey, bitter honey, pepper, rubber, oil palm, durian and rubber.


APP, by maintaining commercial links with BRS despite these complaints, has broken its commitment to ensure that land is acquired from communities through a process known as free, prior and informed consent (FPIC), according to the NGOs.


FPIC is one of the key principles of international human rights law to protect indigenous communities from the destruction of their livelihood and culture as a result of land development.


Aidil Fitri, director of HaKi, said in a press statement that “APP has made a commitment that any new concessions or fiber used to supply the OKI mill will respect the rights of affected communities to give or withhold their Free, Prior and Informed Consent.”


“If APP brings BRS on as a supplier it would clearly be breaking its own sustainability policies and its promise to respect human rights,” he said.


On the environmental implications, Lafcadio Cortesi, Asia director, Rainforest Action Network, commented: “There is a lot of concern that the OKI mill will drive more social conflict, peatland drainage and deforestation.


“This is a test case for APP. Pulp and paper customers and investors will be watching whether APP will be true to its word and avoid suppliers like BRS,” he said.


APP has pointed out that OKI mill will play an important role in meeting growing market demand for pulp and paper, and will create around 10,000 jobs, directly and indirectly, with a priority on hiring South Sumatrans.


The news emerges less than a fortnight after APP abruptly cancelled a trip for sustainability publications Eco-Business and Mongabay to visit the mill.


The company said that it was not ready to share the sustainability side of the mill’s story, after initially inviting the media to cover its forest conversation policy and fire management strategy - a key part of which was empowering local communities with the means to earn a living from the forest without resorting to harmful land clearing activity.


Eco-Business has approached APP for comment.

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