International Hydropower Excluding Indigenous People
International Hydropower Association Accused of Excluding Indigenous Peoples and Supporting Taib’s Corruption
One month before the hydropower
World Congress is due to be staged in Kuching, Malaysia,
dam-affected communities and NGOs are criticizing the
hydropower lobby organization’s cooperation with the
corrupt regime of Sarawak Chief Minister, Taib
Mahmud.
(KUCHING, MALAYSIA / LONDON, UK) The
International Hydropower Association (IHA), an industry body
that claims to promote the ‘sustainable’ use of
hydroenergy, has come under fire over organizing its
upcoming World Congress in Sarawak. The Malaysian state of
Sarawak is infamous for corruption and the disfranchisement
of its indigenous peoples. Hydropower is a particularly hot
issue in Sarawak at the moment due to the state
government’s plans to displace thousands of indigenous
people to make way for twelve new dams in the Borneo
rainforest.
In a letter to IHA director Richard
Taylor, Sarawak’s SAVE Rivers Network, together with NGOs
from Switzerland and the US, criticize the industry body for
banning the people of Sarawak who are affected by the dam
from the World Congress by levying prohibitive admission
fees. Admission to the Congress, which will be discussing
issues of the utmost importance for the future of
Sarawak’s native communities threatened by the dams, costs
1950 US dollars.
“By pricing low-income
communities out of your conference, you are complicit in
denying affected communities a voice”, the NGOs write.
“We, the affected communities and the undersigned
supporting NGOs therefore demand that IHA give free access
to the congress to at least 20 affected people and an
opportunity to talk.”
Sarawak Chief Minister Taib
Mahmud is currently under investigation by the Malaysian
Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC). He is known to have
abused his political position to grant timber and plantation
concessions to members of his family. Consequently, his
family has amassed stakes in over 300 Malaysian companies
during his thirty years in power. Companies owned by the
Taib family have also profited from state contracts granted
by Sarawak’s state-owned power supplier and
dam-implementer, Sarawak Energy.
Aware of these
allegations of corruption against Sarawak Chief Minister
Taib, the signatories of the letter criticize IHA for
holding their World Congress at the Borneo Convention
Centre, a building complex constructed and run by the family
of Sarawak Chief Minister, Taib Mahmud. While Taib’s
sister Raziah Mahmud Geneid is the chairperson of the
centre, Taib’s son Mahmud Abu Bekir Taib is one of its
directors.
“It is an absolute scandal that the
IHA has chosen the Taib family’s Borneo Convention Centre
for their congress”, said Bruno Manser Fund director,
Lukas Straumann. “The congress centre’s operators are
the very same people who are the main beneficiaries of
Sarawak’s corruption-driven dam plans. We demand that the
IHA immediately change the conference venue. Otherwise, the
IHA will lose all credibility in addressing corruption in
the hydropower sector.”
The International
Hydropower Association’s World Congress is taking place
from 21 to 24 May 2013 in Kuching, Malaysia. It is expected
to attract more than 500 hydropower experts from around the
globe.
ENDS