Tribe lives in poverty, isolation in protected forest
Thursday, 13 November 2008
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Paser regency, East Kalimantan, is home to an  indigenous tribe called the Paser Muluy. The group lives in a settlement,  isolated on the higher plains of the Gunung Lumut Protection Forest, in Muluy  hamlet, Suan Slutung village, Muara Komam district.
 
A majority of them live in absolute poverty as they  only depend on non-timber products from the forest for a living, such as honey,  rattan and resins. 
Seasonally the group tills an area which has been  designated as customary farmland. 
They lead a life far from civilization, located  hundreds of kilometers from Tanah Grogot, Paser regency's capital. 
Residents have to walk through rough terrain as far  as 18 kilometers to the main village of Suan Slutung for medical treatment as  there is no community health center in the hamlet. 
"The road was opened by timber companies. We  usually use herbs from the forest to treat the sick. The community health center  is too far away," said Paser Muluy tribal chief Jidan during a recent meeting  facilitated by Kawal Borneo Community Foundation, a Kalimantan environmental  group. 
"Besides, we don't own vehicles. If our wives are  going to give birth, the village midwife will attend to them. We don't have the  means for treatment or for delivery." 
The tribe has been living in the area for the past  13 generations. Their numbers are small, as there are only 25 families, or 120  people living in the village. 
They are completely deprived of their basic rights  to education and healthcare. Most, if not all of them, are not well versed in  the Indonesian language. 
They claim to have received no attention from the  government. Its government-sponsored illiteracy eradication program has been  running ineffectively. 
The village's only education facility is an  elementary school with a status of visiting school which has 26 pupils.  
Only two assistant tutors teach students from the  first to sixth grades. The school was set up in 2002, but there were no teachers  for two years. 
Lessons began in 2004 -- the reason why some of the  first 2008 graduates are 18 years old. 
"Our children can't pursue their studies to the  next level after graduating from elementary school because we don't have money  to send them to schools outside the village," Jidan said. 
Based on observations during the meeting with the  Paser Muluy tribe, around 20 local youths said they have never had the chance to  gain a formal education. Most of them have no means to earn a regular income.  
"Since early September we haven't been able to earn  a living because there has been no honey. To survive, we depend on help from our  relatives or neighbors," said resident Jidan. 
The village is not connected to the power grid. Its  only source of light comes from a micro-hydropower plant donated by the Padi  Indonesia Foundation. 
"However, because of the recent landslide it is out  of order. We plan to work together to repair it," said another resident,  Ngunsang. 
Residents can only pin their hopes to survive on  the sustainability of the Gunung Lumut Protection Forest. They claim 18,000  hectares of the forest as customary forest. 
"The forest is our life and soul. The government  should understand this and pay attention to this issue and not try and separate  us from the forest by relocating us to the lower reaches of the river," Jidan  said. 
The three-by-four meter houses inhabited by the  Paser Mulut tribespeople are part of assistance received from the Paser regency  social office. Their daily water supply comes from the river or wells.  
The government plans to relocate the tribe to the  lower reaches of the area and designate the forest as a national park, Jidan  said. 
Besides farming, the village women make pleated  bamboo or rattan utensils for their own use and sometimes are able to sell them  to visitors. 
However, don't expect to get there by public  transportation. During the wet season, only four-wheel-drive vehicles are able  to reach the village. Counselors from the Paser Traditional Community Foundation  often have to stay the night in the middle of the jungle because their  motorbikes got stuck in the mud and there is no one to help. 
"I feel like crying when my motorbike gets stuck in  the mud," said Iwan Himawan, a counselor. 
The Paser Muluy tribespeople were living in the  Gunung Lumut Protection Forest before the government designated it as a  protection forest in 1982.
Jakarta Post
Jakarta Post
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Judul: Tribe lives in poverty, isolation in protected forest
Ditulis oleh Lambang Insiwarifianto
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