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Anne of Green AbleAnne Kajir combats the greed of Papua New Guinea's timber barons26 Apr 2006
The highlands of Papua New Guinea cradle some of the most remote places in the world, and are home to an astounding diversity of languages, cultures, and plant and animal life -- including the Asian Pacific's largest intact stand of tropical forest.
Anne Kajir.
Photo: Goldman Environmental Prize.
Attorney Anne Kajir has spent most of her adult life fighting for traditional landowners. The CEO of the Environmental Law Center in the capital city of Port Moresby, Kajir has used court cases and legal education work to force the logging industry to pay damages to some indigenous landowners. Though she has been physically attacked and robbed in retaliation, she has persisted with her campaign, and is currently the lead attorney in a Supreme Court case against a multinational timber conglomerate. Despite victories by Kajir and her allies, the power of the timber industry is growing. Last year, a new national forestry bill stripped away landowner-consent requirements for timber permits. It also removed a seat for environmental interests on Papua New Guinea's National Forest Board, replacing it with a seat for the timber industry. "We've gone back to square one," says Kajir. Kajir, 32, was awarded one of six 2006 Goldman Environmental Prizes at a ceremony in San Francisco on April 24. She spoke to Grist from San Francisco. Landowners are usually the ones most affected, simply because most of their land is destroyed. They have to walk longer distances to fetch clean water, and women have to go deeper into the forest to look for food. In many of these areas, there is no proper infrastructure being built -- no proper school, no proper hospital.
Traditional landowners in a logged area in the country's Western Province.
Photo: Greenpeace-Schellema.
So this woman said to me, "You stop the logging. I don't want this to happen in any other place, on any other part of my land." I said, "You know, I cannot promise you that I'll stop the logging, but I'll try." And that's where I've been ever since.
Goldman Prizewinners
Meet the winners of the 2006 Goldman Environmental Prize:
Silas Kpanan'Ayoung Siakor of Liberia
Yu Xiaogang of China
Olya Melen of Ukraine
Anne Kajir of Papua New Guinea
Craig Williams of the United States
Kajir leads a community workshop.
Photo: Will Parrinello.
I just like seeing people happy, you know? So it basically gives me the kicks every time the landowners smile and say, "Thank you."
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