Singapore Environment Council:
International Policy Dialogue on the Southeast Asian Fires

(IFFN No. 19 - September 1998,p. 9-12)


Chairman's Statement

On 4 and 5 June 1998, the Singapore Environment Council held its first International Policy Dialogue on the Southeast Asian Fires. The Dialogue was organized with support from the Singapore Institute of International Affairs and the Foundation for International Environmental Law and Development (FIELD-UK) and sponsorship from Shangri-La Hotel, Far East Organization and the Hanns Seidel Foundation.

The Dialogue brought together some forty representatives of international, regional and local non-government organizations (NGOs), think-tanks, academic institutions, and the private sector, as well as international and governmental institutions.

These included:

NGOs: the Nature Conservancy (USA-Indonesia), the Nature Society of Singapore, NGOs for Integrated Protection Areas (the Philippines), Singapore Environment Council, Worldwide Fund for Nature (WWF-Indonesia and WWF-Regional), World Resources Institute (Regional).

Think-Tanks and Academic Institutions: Asia-Pacific Centre for Environmental Law (APCEL-Singapore), Centre for Remote Imaging, Sensing and Processing (CRISP-NUS), Centre for International Forestry Research (Indonesia), Center for Tropical Forest Science, Environment and Economy Programme for South East Asia (EEPSEA-Canada), Foundation for International Environmental Law and Development (FIELD-UK), Institute of Southeast Asian Studies (ISEAS), Institute of Policy Studies (IPS-Singapore), Institute of Strategic and International Studies (ISIS-Malaysia), the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry (Germany), and Singapore Institute of International Affairs.

Private Sector: Bombardier Aerospace, Golden Hope Plantations (Malaysia), Singapore International Chamber of Commerce, and Shell-Brunei.

International and Governmental Organizations: Asia Development Bank, ASEAN Secretariat, BAPEDAL (Indonesia), United Nations Environment Programme, US State Department, US-Asia Environment Programme and World Conservation Union (IUCN).

The Dialogue called attention to the fires in Southeast Asia, and especially Indonesia, as a matter of regional and global significance. It called on Indonesia and other countries with fires to take appropriate actions to mitigate the present fires and prevent future fires. It called for coordinated action among the regional countries, ASEAN, the international community, international organizations, and non-governmental organizations.

The Dialogue noted that non-governmental organizations (NGOs) can contribute to solutions to the fires and called for greater coordination between NGOs working in Indonesia, the region and at the international level. It also called for regular dialogue to be established between NGOs and ASEAN officials.

Members of the Dialogue noted, with great concern, that the fires in Indonesia:

Members of the Dialogue

Noted: ASEAN has promulgated the 1995 Cooperation Plan on Transboundary Pollution and 1997 Action Plan on the Haze, with regular reviews in 1998, promising closer cooperation and joint actions for monitoring, fire-fighting and prevention, establishing sub-regional fire-fighting areas in Kalimantan and Sumatra and considering shared resources for fire-fighting and prevention;

Despite the economic difficulties facing many ASEAN members, ASEAN has shown commitment to regularly review the compliance with and possible improvements to the Action Plan;

And called for ASEAN and its member states:

Noted: The important role of international law, especially Principle 2 of the Rio Declaration, and that Indonesian authorities had accepted moral responsibility for the effects of the fires and haze;

Indonesia has ratified the international conventions on Climate Change and on Biological Diversity;

Indonesian authorities have sought to address the issue by passing laws to prohibit the use of fire, and increasing fines and penalties for offenders, naming some 180 suspected companies; and

The Indonesian government, experiencing a time of economic hardship, humanitarian emergencies in some regions, and political change, has promised reform, especially to eradicate nepotism, corruption and cronyism;

And called for Indonesia:

Noted: More than 18 different donors from the international community rendered assistance to Indonesia in 1997;

The UN Environment Programme (UNEP) has been welcomed by ASEAN to coordinate international efforts for fire fighting and prevention;

The Asian Development Bank has undertaken to provide technical assistance for ASEAN; and

The International Monetary Fund, World Bank and Asian Development Bank are working with the Indonesian government to deal with the economic crisis in that country by making necessary reforms.

And called for International Organizations and Bilateral Donors

Noted: The efforts of NGOs in Indonesia and the concern of NGOs in the region and internationally; and

The welcome extended by ASEAN Ministers for the Environment in 1998 for contributions by NGOs

And called upon NGOs

Noted: Businesses and private sector companies are both involved with and affected by the fires and the resulting "haze" pollution

And called upon Businesses and Private Sector Companies:

 

This statement records the chairman’s interpretation of views expressed in the Dialogue. It does not reflect a unanimous or consensus view of the participants of the organizations represented.

 

Friday, 6 June 1998

Simon SC Tay
Chairman, SEC International Policy Dialogue

c/o Singapore Environment Council
21 Lewin Terrace, Fort Canning Park,
Singapore 179290

Fax: ++65-337-6035
Tel:  ++65-337-6062
e-mail: secnet@singnet.com.sg

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