Extracted
From Malaysiakini
Minister: Palm oil victim of smear
campaign
May
16, 06 11:09am
Malaysia
today hit back at allegations its palm oil industry kills orangutans by
clearing forests, saying it was an attempt by industry competitors in the
developed world to undermine the sector.
Energy, Water
and Communications Minister Dr Lim Keng Yaik charged that developed countries
which produce oils and fats were engaging in a smear campaign in the face of
stiff competition from palm oil.
"They
know they cannot compete with palm oil so how do they fight you? They find some
reason and hit you below the belt," Lim said at the launch of regional
headquarters here for Netherlands-based biofuel traders BioX Group B.V.
"They
come up with 'Palm oil kills ... the orangutan'," said the minister in a
fiery speech, during which he repeatedly mimicked orangutan noises.
"So we
have to fight that. Don't worry ... we will. When Malaysians get angry, they
fight. And I guarantee you we will win," said Lim.
Palm oil in
Indonesia and Malaysia has been blamed for destroying vast swathes of jungle,
pushing endangered animals such as the orangutan to extinction, and creating
Southeast Asia's annual haze crisis as forests are burned off for plantations.
But Lim said
the campaign over the large red-haired apes, which are native to Malaysia's
eastern states on Borneo island, emerged after palm oil exports from Malaysia
to the European Union more than tripled.
Like
Tarzan and Jane
He said no
forests were cleared for plantations and natural forest still covered some 64
percent of Malaysia.
"What
more do you want? Do you want us to be 100 percent covered with natural forest,
so that we don't use cars, so that we swing from tree to tree like Tarzan and
Jane? So that you can come and take photos of these loin-clothed natives?"
Most of
Malaysia's palm oil plantations were converted from existing rubber
plantations, with the last plantations opened up 40 years ago, he said.
"We owe
no apology to anyone to use our forest for our own use. Just like the Europeans
used up all their forests for their own use," he said.
Malaysia is
the world's largest palm oil producer, accounting for about half of global
output. It aims to become the world's top producer of palm oil-based biodiesel
amid an aggressive expansion in its palm oil production as demand soars for the
alternative fuel.
- AFP