Jakarta,
Feb 15, 2014 (Antara)- Hotspots in forests, plantations and peatland fires,
which came early on Sumatra and Kalimantan islands this year, have
caused the Indonesian government to intensify law enforcement to deal
with the problem.
"Usually haze occurs in May or June. But, this year, the haze has
happened in January and February in Riau and West Kalimantan," the
National Disaster Mitigation Agency (BNPB) spokesman Sutopo stated in
Jakarta, recently.
On Saturday morning (Feb 15), the Terra and Aqua Satellite detected 704
hotspots in Sumatra, an increase of almost 100 percent from 357 on the
previous day. The largest number was found in Riau Province with 611,
drastically up from 53 one day earlier.
The
704 hotspots were spread over six provinces on Sumatra island,
including 64 in North Sumatra, 18 in Aceh, four each in Jambi and Bangka
Belitung, and three in Riau Islands province, Sanya Gautami, analyst of
the Pekanbaru meteorological, climatology and geophysics agency (BMKG)
said on Feb. 15.
In Riau province, the 611 hotspots were detected in ten districts and a
municipality, including 228 in Bengkalis, 120 in Siak, 77 in Pelalawan,
64 in Meranti, 50 in Indragiri Hilir, 37 in Rokan Hilir, 27 in Dumai,
six in Indragiri Hulu, and one each in Rokan Hulu and Kampar district.
On
February 11, some 244 hotspots were detected in Riau. The haze produced
by fires reduced visibility in parts of the province to 500 meters,
while the pollutant standard index reached 400 PSI, which is defined as
"hazardous".
In Dumai city, the latest Pollutant Standard Index reading in the coastal city hit 200 PSI, which is categorized as unhealthy. The Dumai city administration was set to declare the highest level of alert after haze blanketed the city.
In Dumai city, the latest Pollutant Standard Index reading in the coastal city hit 200 PSI, which is categorized as unhealthy. The Dumai city administration was set to declare the highest level of alert after haze blanketed the city.
The
BMKG predicted that over the next one week, the amount of rain will
remain low in Riau province and the number of hotspots could potentially
increase, Gautami said.
A worsening scenario is anticipated as the BNBP has predicted that the drought this year would be more intense than in 2013, as a possible weak El Nino might develop later this year. In 1982-83 and 1994, the El Nino-induced forest fires destroyed some 6.4 million hectares of forest, especially in East Kalimantan. El Nino usually triggers drought in Indonesia.
A worsening scenario is anticipated as the BNBP has predicted that the drought this year would be more intense than in 2013, as a possible weak El Nino might develop later this year. In 1982-83 and 1994, the El Nino-induced forest fires destroyed some 6.4 million hectares of forest, especially in East Kalimantan. El Nino usually triggers drought in Indonesia.
On
February 11, the BNPB held coordination work with several government
agencies and law enforcement agencies to tackle the problem of haze from
forest fires and drought this year.
The
government will address the forest fire problems through land and
aerial operations. The land operation will involve, among others,
military officers, police, forest fire brigade units, and civilian
security personnel.
The aerial operation will include water bombing from air and weather
modification or cloud seeding technologies. The BNBP will rent the
Be-200 amphibian plane and the Kamov helicopter from Russia for use in
water bombing.
The meeting, chaired by the BNBP chief, Syamsul Maarif, was attended by representatives from the coordinating ministry for people's welfare, the forestry ministry, the agriculture ministry, the environmental affairs ministry, the home affairs ministry, the Indonesian defense forces (TNI), the national police, and regional disaster mitigation offices from Jambi, South Sumatra, North Sumatra, Riau, West Kalimantan, Central Kalimantan, South Kalimantan, and East Kalimantan.
The meeting, chaired by the BNBP chief, Syamsul Maarif, was attended by representatives from the coordinating ministry for people's welfare, the forestry ministry, the agriculture ministry, the environmental affairs ministry, the home affairs ministry, the Indonesian defense forces (TNI), the national police, and regional disaster mitigation offices from Jambi, South Sumatra, North Sumatra, Riau, West Kalimantan, Central Kalimantan, South Kalimantan, and East Kalimantan.
Maarif reminded all involved to implement presidential instruction no.
16/2011 on the Forest and Plantation Fires Control Intensification.
He also ordered all law enforcement authorities to enforce the existing
laws regarding the environment. "We have produced numerous regulations
regarding land forest fires. But they are not enforced. The main key to
overcoming forest and land fires is the enforcement of the law," he
said.
The
agency's chief emphasized that incident, such as the one in 2013 when
Sumatra's haze affected Singapore and Malaysia, should not happen this
year.
Last year, the Indonesian government declared a state of emergency in the Riau province on June 21 after heavy smog blanketed parts of the Sumatra Island, Singapore, and Malaysia. Singapore urged its citizens to remain indoors amid unprecedented levels of air pollution, while Malaysia closed 200 schools.
Last year, the Indonesian government declared a state of emergency in the Riau province on June 21 after heavy smog blanketed parts of the Sumatra Island, Singapore, and Malaysia. Singapore urged its citizens to remain indoors amid unprecedented levels of air pollution, while Malaysia closed 200 schools.
The Sumatra fires earlier this year had worried Singapore officials. In
a Facebook post recently, referring to the Sumatra fires, Singapore's
Environment and Water Resources Minister Vivian Balakrishnan wrote: "We
will try to encourage them to take action - but we all know the welfare
of close neighbours is not their priority."
As Maarif said, enforcement of existing laws is a key to deal with the annual fires, as some of them are deliberately set to clear land for plantation and farming areas, despite the fact that such activity is banned by the Indonesian government.
As Maarif said, enforcement of existing laws is a key to deal with the annual fires, as some of them are deliberately set to clear land for plantation and farming areas, despite the fact that such activity is banned by the Indonesian government.
Therefore, Acting Riau Governor Djohermansyah Djohan ordered a thorough
investigation into the fires to act as a deterrence for those involved.
"Yesterday, we signed an MoU (Memorandum of Understanding) with the
plantation companies. The MoU is binding on the plantation companies,
which must be committed to keep their plantations protected from fires,"
he said on Feb. 15.
The
governor hailed the Riau police for arresting six people suspected of
setting fires to forested land in a number of districts, on Feb 13.
He asked the police to thoroughly investigate the case and not let the scope of the investigation remain limited to just these six suspects.
He asked the police to thoroughly investigate the case and not let the scope of the investigation remain limited to just these six suspects.
"The provincial police are investigating the case. We hope that the law
enforcement agencies would be able to investigate the case thoroughly,"
he said.
Riau Police Chief Inspector General Condro Kirono in Pekanbaru on Feb. 13 said the suspects were charged under Law No. 18 of 2004 on plantations, with a punishment calling for a maximum 10 years imprisonment, and a maximum fine of Rp10 billion.
Riau Police Chief Inspector General Condro Kirono in Pekanbaru on Feb. 13 said the suspects were charged under Law No. 18 of 2004 on plantations, with a punishment calling for a maximum 10 years imprisonment, and a maximum fine of Rp10 billion.
Those
arrested were also charged under Law No. 26 of 2007 on Spatial
Planning. In 2013, the Riau Police had apprehended as many as 33 people
suspected in the burning of forests. ***3***
(f001/ INE/H-YH)
(f001/ INE/H-YH)
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