8 November 2013 4 menit
Joint statement by participants assembled at the ‘’Conflict or Consent workshop’’
Medan, 8-10th November 2013.
At the occasion of the Workshop Conflict or Consent, held prior to RSPO RT11, the participants brought together 16 case studies from two continents, bearing witness to serious land conflicts and associated human rights violations caused by irresponsible oil palm plantation development.1
We observe some advances in procedures and improvements in the Principles and Criteria, and strong efforts by some members and other parties to push for remedies. However, the participants observed that by and large many of the companies implicated in these violations are RSPO members. These realities underline the enormous challenge RSPO, its membership and the market are facing to ensure compliance with basic requirements enshrined in the RSPO Principles and Criteria, such as adherence to fundamental human rights, national laws and international social and environmental conventions.
It is reason for concern that the European/Dutch/French/British/German/Belgian.. policy and market arena is still unable to fully grasp the serious social implications of trading and using this strategic commodity. It is also to argue that RSPO evolved due to governments failing to regulate the palm oil sector and prevent the serious abuses recorded in the said cases studies and many other field assessments.
It is also to emphasize that participants endorsing this appeal are all intensively involved in the palm oil and RSPO arena, working to develop means to help mitigate and resolve these problems. Some of us have been mandated to engage in the various executive and governing bodies of RSPO
Appreciative of the commitments made by the … Task Force to reach its targets of certified palm oil, we request you to review our report and formulate actions which help ensure that all palm oil entering the market is indeed ‘’free of conflict’’.
We invite you to join us in our efforts to up-hold the RSPO standard and its implementation, notably by harnessing its remedial instruments such as its complaints mechanism and the RSPO Dispute Settlement Facility, and to urge our governments to improve the legal-institutional framework guiding the palm oil sector. We request you to verify for yourselves in the field, in consultation with the communities, the conditions under which palm oil is being produced and help co-design further measures to bring the RSPO standard into practice. We stand ready to dialogue with all parties and do what we can to help resolve these problems.
Sincerely yours,
- Andalas University, Padang, Sumatra
- Badan Perjuangan Rakyat Penunggu Indonesia (BPRPI), Indonesia
- Bitra Indonesia, North Sumatra
- Both ENDS, Netherlands
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Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement (CIRAD), France
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École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, France
- ELSAKA, North Sumatra
- Forest Peoples Programme, United Kingdom
- Front Mahasiswa Nasionalis Medan, North Sumatra
- Gabungan Serikat Buruh Indonesia, North Sumatra
- HuMa, Indonesia
- HUTAN, Malaysia
- Hutan Rakyat Institute (HARI), North Sumatra
- IDEAL, Malaysia
- Impartial Mediators Network, Indonesia
- Indigenous Peoples’ Foundation for Education and Environment, Thailand
- Indonesia Peoples’ Alliance, North Sumatra
- Jaringan Kerja Pemetaan Partisipatif (JKPP), Indonesia
- Jaringan seOrang Asal SeMalaysia (JOAS)
- Keystone Foundation, India
- Komunitas Peduli Hutan Sumatra Utara (KPHSU), Indonesia
- Lembaga Gemawan, West Kalimantan, Indonesia
- Natural Justice, South Africa
- Oxfam Novib, The Netherlands
- PUSAKA Indonesia, Indonesia
- PUSAKA, Indonesia
- Qbar Association, Padang, Indonesia
- Rainforest Action Network (RAN), United States
- Sawit Watch, Indonesia
- SCALE UP, Indonesia
- Setara Jambi, Indonesia
- Socio-Pastoral Institute, Cameroon
- StaB-LB, North Sumatra, Indonesia
- Transformasi Untuk Keadilan Indonesia (TuK INDONESIA)
- Wahana Bumi Hijau (WBH), Indonesia
- Walhi Kalbar, Indonesia
- Walhi Kalteng, Indonesia
- Walhi Riau, Indonesia
- Walhi SumSel, Indonesia
- Walhi Sumut, Indonesia
- Warsi, Jambi, Indonesia
- Yayasan Konservasi Way Seputih (YKWS), Indonesia
1 Lihat juga: http://www.forestpeoples.org/topics/palm-oil-rspo/publication/2013/conflict-or-consent-oil-palm-sector-crossroads
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