Today, Indonesia has a new national park that aims to protect at
least 23 bird species found nowhere else in the world. The Aketajawe
Nature Reserve and the Lalobata Protected Forest on the Indonesian
island of Halmahera were together declared a National Park by the
Indonesian Minister of Forestry on Thursday.
The park will protect 167,300 hectares of hill and lowland
rainforest of exceptional biodiversity importance, says BirdLife
International, which has worked for more than eight years to
accomplish this level of protection for the area.
The timing of the announcement is especially significant as it
coincides with BirdLife’s publication of the "Important Bird Areas
of Asia," the organization said.
But Weda Bay Minerals, a Canadian mining exploration and
development company listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange, has
approval to develop a nickel and cobalt mine and processing facility
on Halmahera Island.

The Halmahera Island site where Weda Bay Nickel intends to
construct its mine and processing facility. (Photo courtesy
P.T. Weda Bay Nickel)
The
company, through its Indonesian subsidiary, P.T. Weda Bay Nickel,
will be developing the mine in the Aketajawe Nature Reserve and
Lalobata Protected Forest, regardless of the new national park
status of the area.
In July, the Indonesian Parliament decided that companies could
mine in protected forests if they held permits before a 1999 law,
Law 41, was passed that banned such mining.
In addition to the new language added to Law 41, a Presidential
Decree passed this summer states that 13 companies, including P.T.
Weda Bay Nickel, have met the conditions which allow them to apply
for the required mining licenses.
Weda Bay President and CEO John Lynch said, "Achievement of this
outcome was the result of close cooperation between government and
the mining industry and in which P.T. Weda Bay Nickel played a
leading role. This has only been possible through the excellent
relationships the company has made at all levels of government and
the relevant parliamentary commissions."
The park is essential for at least 23 bird species that are found
only in the North Maluku district including the Wallace’s
Standardwing Semioptera wallacei, that BirdLife calls "charismatic."
Three of Halmahera’s four unique species - the sombre kingfisher,
Halcyon funebris; the Halmahera cuckooshrike, Coracina parvula; and
the dusky oriole, Oriolus phaeocromus, are found within the
boundaries of the new park.

Wallace's Standardwing is one of the unique birds found only on
Halmahera. (Photo courtesy Morten Strange/BirdLife International)
The
final species, the invisible rail, Habroptila wallacii, may prove to
be there too, although it has not yet been seen.
The park is also home to a semi-nomadic community of people known
as the Tobelo Dalam, whose traditional lifestyle has been
increasingly under pressure as forests are logged and cleared for
settlement and plantations, BirdLife explains.
Aketajawe-Lolobata was originally identified as an Important Bird
Area following BirdLife survey work in the 1994 to 1996 period,
supported by the British Birdfair and the Loro Parque Foundation.
More recently, research into the area has been carried out by
BirdLife Indonesia, the Indonesian government’s Directorate-General
of Forest Conservation, the local University of Pattimura, and local
conservation groups Hualopu and North Maluku Environmental
Conservation.
In 1999 the Indonesian Government agreed to create the park, but
civil unrest in Maluku Province delayed the declaration until
stability returned to the area in 2002. In the meantime, says
BirdLife, there has been widespread forest clearance, so the
creation of the island’s first protected area is especially
welcome.