How EU banned pesticides are dumped in the Indonesian Borneo, disrupting the ecosystem, and communities’ livelihood
In Bangkal, a small village on the shore of the Sembuluh lake, the local indigenous Dayak population found themselves surrounded by palm oil monocultures in the span of the last fifteen years. “We sold our land and now we are poor - say local inhabitants - The only thing the plantations brought is conflict and pollution”.
The residents in Bangkal used to rely on the lake for drinking water and for fishing. But the massive use of pesticides and fertilisers in the plantations polluted the water: fishes are disappearing and - in one of the most rainy areas in the world - the population now struggles to access clean water.
Palm oil monocultures is deeply intertwined with the massive use of Gramoxone, the infamous weed killer also known as paraquat, that has been banned in Europe since 2007.
Paraquat is manufactured in the UK, by the Swiss company Syngenta. In 2019 Indonesia was the third global importer from Europe. With the Indonesian government trying to silence dissent on such a key sector, and the EU refusing to take actions on banned pesticides export, local communities’ health and future are at stake.
An investigation by Daniela Sala, Adi Renaldi, and Budi Baskoro, supported by the Journalismfund Europe.