Penan Community Member Urgently Calls Sarawak Premier to Halt Destructive Logging in Upper Baram

satellite image of ongoing logging operations in ba data bila

A member of the Penan Indigenous community from Ba Data Bila in Upper Baram has issued urgent protest letters to Sarawak Premier Abang Johari Tun Openg and the Human Rights Commission of Malaysia (SUHAKAM), demanding an immediate halt to ongoing logging operations by Borneoland Timber Resources.

(Ba Data Bila, Sarawak) Today, a member of the Ba Data Bila community sent a letter to Premier Abang Johari, highlighting the urgency of the situation in the village due to threats by the logging company. Borneoland Timber Resources Sdn (“Borneoland”) is currently clearing some of the last remaining primary forests inside the Suling-Selaan Protected Forest.

Facing ongoing deforestation and intensification of conflicts, community members who oppose logging have been forced to leave their homes and camp on their paddy fields, where they continue to resist the destruction of their lands. “To protect our paddy fields and our last remaining forest, we have repeatedly set up a peaceful blockade along the logging road, including placing very clear signs asking for our land to be respected”, states the letter. Despite these efforts, the logging operations persist, blockades have been dismantled, and community demands bluntly ignored.

In August 2024, over 500 Penan signed a petition urging authorities to intervene. However, their pleas have gone unanswered, and large-scale logging has continued unabated, with no regard for Indigenous rights or the environmental devastation being caused.

In the letter to SUHAKAM, the Penan states: “Our community continues to strive to protect whatever remains of our customary forest. We are working to uphold our rights safely. We urgently need your support to uphold justice, human rights, and our right to live with dignity in our own territory.”

The letters call for immediate action to stop the destruction of the forest in Ba Data Bila caused by Borneoland. Further, it urges SUHAKAM and the Premier to immediately assess the environmental and social damage inflicted on the Penan territories and to launch a full investigation into potential human rights violations in the area.