Irene Wabiwa |
Though alarmed by the
decision, civil society organisations acknowledge that the move disproves
Herakles Farms’ claim that it had all the necessary permits from the start, and
confirms that the company has in fact been operating illegally for more than
three years.
The project, originally envisaged to cover
more than 70,000 hectares but with a provisional land lease now accorded for
approximately 20,000 hectares, has been dogged by controversy from the
beginning. Work and forest clearing has been conducted in violation of national
law, despite fierce local opposition, and would destroy a forested area of
vital biodiversity surrounded by protected areas.
“A downsized project
does not resolve the problems related to the palm oil project by Herakles
Farms,” said Irène Wabiwa, forest campaigner with Greenpeace Africa. “It simply
remains the wrong project in the wrong place, as the impact on communities’ livelihoods
and the forests remain unacceptable.”
“The opaque and illegal
manner in which the project has been carried out demonstrates the threats to
Africa's forests if operations like this are allowed to proceed unchecked.”
According to the
release, by signing a provisional land lease, the Cameroonian government is
also putting at risk a partnership with the European Union and Germany, who
have a long standing relationship with the Cameroon government to help protect
biodiversity and promote good governance in the forest sector.
“The Cameroonian
government has shot itself in the foot with this decision. They are making it clear that under the guise
of “investment” virtually anyone can get away with illegal activities in the
country and even be rewarded for it. It will be the government itself and the
Cameroonian people who lose out from this,” said Anuradha Mittal, Executive Director,
the Oakland Institute.
International palm oil
companies and investors are increasingly targeting Africa for new projects. The
Herakles Farms plantation, if not stopped, would set a bad and dangerous precedent
for this type of large-scale plantation development in the region.
The signatories of the
release hold that the Government of Cameroon could still make a better choice,
by stopping the Herakles Farms project and adopting clear safeguards for palm
oil development in its national policies.
Finally, Greenpeace is calling on palm oil
companies and investors to commit to zero deforestation policies that protect
Africa’s forests and the livelihoods of the people who live there.
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