JAKARTA: Indonesia's environment and forestry ministry said on Wednesday (Jan 29) it ended a 25-year conservation agreement with the World Wildlife Fund for Nature (WWF) because the group let a forest where it operated burn.
Bambang Hendroyono, secretary-general at the ministry, accused WWF in a statement to Reuters of allowing some of its concession to burn and also criticised a WWF social media campaign slamming the government over forest fires.
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WWF told reporters late on Tuesday that the government had unilaterally ended the deal, which was due to expire in 2023, and that the decision could threaten its efforts to protect endangered wildlife including tigers and rhinos.
Indonesia suffered its worst forest fires last year since 2015, with billowing smoke and haze spread across a huge area including neighbouring countries. The World Bank estimated that the fires caused US$5.2 billion (£4 billion) in damage.
"The WWF Indonesia Foundation deeply regrets the unilateral decision taken by the Ministry of Environment and Forestry to terminate our decades-long agreement," Kuntoro Mangkusubroto, chairman of WWF Indonesia's advisory board, said on Tuesday.
The agreement, which was signed in 1998, allowed WWF to enter conservation areas for monitoring work on tigers and rhinos, among other endangered animals.
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The burnt forest concession referred to by the ministry was given to WWF by the government for restoration purposes in 2015, according to Elis Nurhayati, a spokeswoman for WWF.
She denied the agency was responsible for the fire on its concession and said the agency apologised if its social media communications had offended the government.
WWF started operating in Indonesia in 1962, according to its website.
Thirty WWF projects with the enviRead More – Source
JAKARTA: Indonesia's environment and forestry ministry said on Wednesday (Jan 29) it ended a 25-year conservation agreement with the World Wildlife Fund for Nature (WWF) because the group let a forest where it operated burn.
Bambang Hendroyono, secretary-general at the ministry, accused WWF in a statement to Reuters of allowing some of its concession to burn and also criticised a WWF social media campaign slamming the government over forest fires.
Advertisement
Advertisement
WWF told reporters late on Tuesday that the government had unilaterally ended the deal, which was due to expire in 2023, and that the decision could threaten its efforts to protect endangered wildlife including tigers and rhinos.
Indonesia suffered its worst forest fires last year since 2015, with billowing smoke and haze spread across a huge area including neighbouring countries. The World Bank estimated that the fires caused US$5.2 billion (£4 billion) in damage.
"The WWF Indonesia Foundation deeply regrets the unilateral decision taken by the Ministry of Environment and Forestry to terminate our decades-long agreement," Kuntoro Mangkusubroto, chairman of WWF Indonesia's advisory board, said on Tuesday.
The agreement, which was signed in 1998, allowed WWF to enter conservation areas for monitoring work on tigers and rhinos, among other endangered animals.
Advertisement
Advertisement
The burnt forest concession referred to by the ministry was given to WWF by the government for restoration purposes in 2015, according to Elis Nurhayati, a spokeswoman for WWF.
She denied the agency was responsible for the fire on its concession and said the agency apologised if its social media communications had offended the government.
WWF started operating in Indonesia in 1962, according to its website.
Thirty WWF projects with the enviRead More – Source