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The hunter-gatherer Penan live in the rainforests of the interior of Sarawak, in the Malaysian part of the island of Borneo.

Traditionally nomadic, most of the 10-12,000 Penan now live in settled communities, but continue to rely on the forest for their existence. Some still live largely nomadically.

Sarawak was ruled for more than a century as the personal kingdom of the ‘Brooke Rajahs’ after the arrival of Englishman James Brooke in 1839. It was handed over to the British in 1946 and was incorporated into Malaysia in 1963.


A Poison to the Penan The Penan of Sarawak express anguish over the logging of their land.

The Sarawak state government does not recognize the Penan’s rights to their land. Since the 1970s, it has backed large-scale commercial logging on tribal land across Sarawak.

In 1987, many Penan communities protested against the logging of their land by blockading the roads cut though the forest by the logging companies. More than a hundred Penan were arrested.

The Penan have kept up their resistance, and continue to mount blockades against the companies. Some have managed to prevent the companies from entering their land, but others have seen much of their forest devastated.


A Penan man collects forest fruit. © Andy Rain/Nick Rain/Survival

Where all of the valuable trees have been cut down, the companies have started to remove the forests completely in order to establish oil palm plantations.

The Sarawak government also plans to build twelve new hydroelectric dams, flooding many villages belonging to Penan and other indigenous people.

How does Survival help?

Survival is urging the Malaysian authorities to recognize the Penan’s rights to their land, and to halt all logging, oil palm plantations, dam construction and other development on their land without their consent.

How do they live?

Unlike the other indigenous peoples of Sarawak, who grow most of their food, the Penan are hunter-gatherers.

Famous for the silent blowpipes and poison darts they use for hunting, the Penan particularly prize wild pigs.

We’re not like the people in the towns, who have money and can buy things. If we lose all the things the forest gives us, we will die.PENAN MAN, BA LAI

They also hunt deer and smaller animals, and catch fish in the many rivers that flow through their land.

Sago is the Penan’s traditional staple food, and comes from the core of a small palm tree.

The Penan process it by trampling on it, and leave it in the sun to dry into a powder. They also gather ferns and fruit from the forest.

Many of the more settled Penan have started to plant rice.

In areas where the forests have been cleared for logging and oil palm plantations, it is becoming almost impossible for the Penan to sustain themselves.

The Malaysian government claims that Sarawak is being logged sustainably – but in fact its forests are being destroyed at one of the fastest rates in the world.


A logger handles trees felled in the Penan’s region. © Andy Rain/Nick Rain/Survival

As the forests are logged, the rivers are silted up, killing the fish. The game is being scared deeper into the few remaining forests, and Penan hunters return home empty-handed.

When the forests start to grow back, it is with thick scrub. The trails the Penan have walked for generations are gone.

The Malaysian logging companies, which include Samling, Interhill and Shin Yang, operate with the full backing of the state government.

Some company workers have threatened the Penan with death if they continue to resist, and others are accused of raping Penan girls and women.

I went up to the ridge last week to tell the workers to stop logging. They told me, ‘This is a government project. If you fight us, we’ll kill you.’PISANG, PENAN MAN

In areas where the big, old trees have all been taken, companies, particularly Shin Yang, are clearing the remaining forest to make way for oil palm plantations (palm oil is used for biofuel and in many foods and cosmetics).

The plantations spell even greater problems for the Penan than the logging, because once the land is covered in oil palm, there is nothing left for them.

With the loss of their forests, the Penan are being forced into poverty, and are suffering from ill health due to poor diet and polluted water.

Dam

In 2008, a document was leaked on the internet revealing plans by the Sarawak government to build a series of twelve new hydroelectric dams, flooding many Penan and other indigenous villages.


Work is in full flow on dams in the Penan’s area.
© Survival

The first of these, the Murum dam, is already under construction, with the initial contract having gone to the controversial Chinese state-owned China Three Gorges Project Corporation.

Chinese engineers are working at the site, hillsides are being blasted, and Penan from six villages have been told they must move to government resettlement areas.

The dams are projected to produce far more electricity than Sarawak uses.

With the loss of their land, the Penan fear they will lose their independence. They know that other Penan who were resettled to make way for the existing Bakun dam are unable to hunt or gather, and find it difficult to grow enough food on the small plots of land provided for them. The resettled Penan also struggle to pay the bills for water and electricity in their government-built homes.

Act now to help the Penan

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