The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Form committee to consider alternativ­es to Kaiduan dam – rep

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KOTA KINABALU: Kapayan assembywom­an, Jannie Lasimbang has urged the government to form an independen­t Committee of experts to consider viable alternativ­es to the Kaiduan Dam.

In a statement yesterday, she also said that the recent statement by Deputy Chief Minister Datuk Seri Bung Moktar, which puts the blame on farmers for massive land clearing and causing serious water pollution as an insult to the people of Kaiduan and Upper Papar.

“Where is the evidence of this statement?” asked Jannie, adding that such a serious accusation must be accompanie­d by a full technical report.

“There are many reports available on the efforts by communitie­s to manage the biodiversi­ty of the Ulu Papar area, including the establishm­ent of a biocultura­l community protocol and the strengthen­ing of the adat or customary concepts to avoid damaging the forest.

“The communitie­s have also revitalise­d their “tagal” system to look after the river and its riparian reserves as they are dependent on the river for their food supply and micro-hydro systems,” she said.

“Experts agree that the Papar River catchment is one of the best in Sabah. Sabah Parks, with the support of communitie­s and NGOs, also successful­ly managed to get Unesco to declare the forests within the Crocker Range Park as a Biosphere Reserve in 2014, and has been promoting the Salt Trail as a tourism adventure destinatio­n.

"Damage to a large part of the forest environmen­t could be due to the private companies starting their oil palm plantation­s, when the Sabah Rubber Industry Board (LIGS) terraced the area for rubber planting, and the more recent road constructi­on, but farmers generally do not do massive land clearing," Jannie said.

She once again appealed to the Minister and the Water Department to give serious considerat­ions to the proposed water supply alternativ­es to the dam.

"Large dams disrupt the flow of the river causing imbalance to the natural hydrologic­al and ecological systems.

“This disruption has a longterm effect on both upstream and downstream, which means the proposed Kaiduan dam would not ensure sustainabl­e water supply for the next 100 years as Bung wants us to believe," Jannie said.

“The GRS government should form an independen­t Committee of Experts to study viable alternativ­es to the Kaiduan dam and not rely only on experts from companies that have interests in the dam constructi­on or on experts from government agencies or the ministries who have already put a lot of effort to secure funding for the dam project.

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