My Ideas and Stories About PAPUA

Making the rich and beautiful resources in Papua become the social economic strength for Papuan has become the long home works. Many people believe that the early start to find the answer is by understanding how Papua looks like, their communities and their special strength. And it can be realize by directly in touch with them. This blogs provides you chance to touch and gets insight ideas, trends and stories about Papua.

Selasa, 04 November 2014

Village Forests Licenses for Sira and Manggroholo

“We Want to Protect and Manage our Customary Land Rights and Resources”

Mapping of Clan Boundary in Sira and Manggroholo Villages, South Sorong - Photo: Bentara Papua


The community in this village are depending much on forests, so weed this forests. It is our live, we not allow any company or any other government investment initiative to cuts the trees in this village” Says Alfred Kladit one of the elders in Sira village, Sub District of Saifi Sorong Sorong – West Papua Province of Indonesia. Kladit is the clan name that included in the big Knasoimos tribes those who lives and claim of 81.390,6 ha of land in south west of bird head Papua.

Population of Sira village are only 178 people within 38 household living in 1,961.8 ha of total Sira Village boundary. The forests are remain primary with dense tree crown covers. We can easily find the high commercial Papua timber such as Merbau (Instia, sp), Matoa (pometia piƱata) eboni (diospiros celebica), angsana (dipterocapace) and red resin (damara) that could reach more than 25m high. Alfred emphasized his argument and showing of the big Merbau tree “we can easy find the big tree like this”. Sago, resin and other non-timber forests products are largely available and waiting to be manages by the community.

Understanding the threat on their forests, community in Sira and their neighbor village Manggroholo have committed to secure their ancestral land from destruction. Vision to maintain the forests and manage it wisely are moved as a consensus when they mapped their customary territories and submitted the legal village forests licenses. In 2014 through ministry of forestry decree number 767 and 768 of 2014 that realized on September 18th the aspiration of community from about 7 clans to secure and manages their territories and its resources are answered. A big positive stepping stone after long advocacy started on 2009 when the community refused the government agenda to puts their forests and land for oil palm and rubber plantation expansion. Ariklaus Kladit again on behalf of the community pointed out their expectation “we hope by this licenses, the security of livelihood sources are keep maintained through proper management practices, improve economic income and provides new jobs opportunity through all the resources management activities they can do such as, sago production, resin collection, rotan harvesting and eagle wood collection”.

A new long journey is beginning with the licenses. Community is now moving to organize them self by concretely packaging the management vision and technical-social facilitation plan that required by the village forests licenses. A proposal to the governor for the management licenses after ministry of forestry decree has been taking and it now waiting for approval. Field based readiness on all technical and social facilitation requirements are waiting for more deeply and growing facilitation.

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