The Borneo Post

Indonesia equips forest rangers with guns in illegal logging battle

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BANDA ACEH, Indonesia: Forest rangers in Indonesia’s Aceh province will be equipped with guns in the battle against illegal logging, an environmen­tal agency official said yesterday.

The jungle-clad region at the tip of Sumatra island loses some 79,000 acres of more than two million hectares of forest annually due to deforestat­ion, including from illegal timber activities, authoritie­s said.

But the risks of fighting criminal elements had soared with many loggers now carrying firearms, said Aceh environmen­tal agency head Syahrial.

“Being on duty in the forest without firearms is not only risky but it’s also not effective when you’re facing illegal loggers (who are usually armed),” he added.

About 120 rangers would be given pistols, rifles and ammunition at a cost of about 1.39 billion rupiah (US$93,500),

“We’ve coordinate­d with local police with respect to procuremen­t and permits,” Syahrial said.

Gun ownership is uncommon in Indonesia outside of military or police personnel and obtaining a personal licence can be difficult.

Aceh’s forest rangers once had guns but they were confiscate­d a er a separatist insurgency broke out in the 1970s. The conflict ended with a peace deal. This week’s decision comes a er Aceh earlier announced that poachers who threaten endangered orangutans, tigers and other wildlife could receive up to 100 lashes from a rattan cane.

While public whipping is common in Indonesia’s Aceh — the only region in the world’s biggest Muslim majority country that imposes Islamic law — it is usually reserved for morality crimes.

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