MNRE, environmentalists and MACC join hands to fight environmental corruption

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KUALA LUMPUR: With environmental degradation recurring nationwide at an alarming rate, environmentalists welcome the effort by the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) in tackling corruption in environmental management.

Veteran environmentalist and one of the founders of the Sahabat Alam Activist Association (KUASA), Afandi Ahmad described the move as a good start to something bigger.

“We thank MACC for talking to us on how to tackle corruption involving the nature,” he told Bernama in response to the establishment of the Environmental Protection and Anti-Corruption Caucus (EPACC)  by MACC, in collaboration with non-governmental organisations and environment experts.

Afandi said major changes were needed to stop the environment from being used as a goldmine for certain parties.

“There are many loopholes right now. As a start,  the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA), that is under the provision of the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment (MNRE), needs to be stricter and more transparent.

“It is true that there are many stages (in EIA)  that must be approved, but sadly, it could be bought. A complete reform in the system is needed,” he lamented.

According to an eco-manifesto signed by 23 Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs) in 2013, all had agreed to declare an eco-emergency on national deforestation and forest degradation.

The NGOs included Transparency International-Malaysia, Bar Council, Institute of Foresters, Malaysian Nature Society and Southeast Asia Council for Food Security and Fair Trade.

According to the manifesto, the massive losses of natural forest in the country is attributed to commercial logging, development of mono-culture, and palm oil plantation.

The ill-conceiving economic development has contributed to a growing number of unsustainable trend, threatening the country’’s forest ecosytem.

Statistics obtained from the MNRE showed that Peninsular Malaysia’s total forested area of 5,901,389 hectares in 2006 has declined to  5,784,870 hectares in 2015.

It showed two per cent deforestation rate or a declined of total forested area of 116,519 hectares in that 10-year period. — Bernama