SINGAPORE — Time is running out for
Indonesia's dwindling rain forests, as illegal logging is destroying them 10
times faster than the Amazon's, environmental group Greenpeace said Wednesday.
Logging could wipe out ancient forests in lowland areas on the Indonesian island
of Sumatra by the end of next year, Greenpeace and other environmental activists
said.
"The end game is near for Indonesian rain forests," said spokesman Tim
Birch. "In five years, this will no longer be an issue, because it will be
the end of the ecosystem in Indonesia."
Greenpeace is especially concerned about the logging of ramin, a hardwood tree
found in the lowland tropical rain forests of Indonesia and Malaysia.
Birch said illegal harvesting of the tree, banned for export by Indonesia in
2001, is killing off the habitat of the orangutan and Sumatran tiger.
"The Amazon has been the poster boy for destruction, but in Indonesia, rain
forests here are being destroyed 10 times faster than the Amazon," said
Peter Sanderson, a crew member of the group's flagship, the Rainbow Warrior.
The Greenpeace ship leaves Singapore for Bangkok on Thursday for the ongoing
U.N. Convention on International Trade of Endangered Species (CITES).
Source: Associated Press