ID :
18049
Thu, 09/04/2008 - 16:52
Auther :
Shortlink :
https://oananews.org//node/18049
The shortlink copeid
M'SIA TO COUNTER SMEAR CAMPAIGN AT EUROPEAN ROUNDTABLE TALKS
KUCHING, Sept 4 (Bernama) -- The oil palm roundtable sustainability talks, being organised by the Malaysian Palm oil Board in three cities in Europe next week, will be part of ongoing efforts to counter the smear campaign against the country's oil palm industry.
Sarawak Timber Industry Development Corp (STIDC) general manager, Len Talif
Salleh, said he was not worried about the impact as long as the delegation
members were professional in their approach and clarified the real
situation.
"The talks will be something we need to handle. I will not worry too much
about the impact as they will not have a major bearing in terms of the timber
and oil palm industries' overall development in Sarawak," he told reporters at
the promotion and sales exhibition for locally-made furniture at the STIDC hall
here Thursday.
Len Talif, who is also Sarawak Planning and Resource Management Ministry
deputy permanent secretary and Forests Department director, will be joining the
high-level delegation.
Plantation Industries and Commodities Minister, Peter Chin Fah Kui, will be
leading the delegation for the meetings with non-governmental organisations
(NGOs) in Brussels, the Hague and London.
He said such criticisms would not dampen efforts to develop the
timber-based industries, which had provided jobs as well as earned foreign
exchange for the state.
Len Talif said Malaysia needed to explain the misconceptions of some NGOs
that the country was cutting down forests and replaced them with oil palm
plantations.
"This is not true because the ecology, environment and biodiversity of
areas developed for oil palm cultivation are not affected.
"The country has been unfairly blamed despite producing palm oil for the
world," he said.
Sarawak Timber Industry Development Corp (STIDC) general manager, Len Talif
Salleh, said he was not worried about the impact as long as the delegation
members were professional in their approach and clarified the real
situation.
"The talks will be something we need to handle. I will not worry too much
about the impact as they will not have a major bearing in terms of the timber
and oil palm industries' overall development in Sarawak," he told reporters at
the promotion and sales exhibition for locally-made furniture at the STIDC hall
here Thursday.
Len Talif, who is also Sarawak Planning and Resource Management Ministry
deputy permanent secretary and Forests Department director, will be joining the
high-level delegation.
Plantation Industries and Commodities Minister, Peter Chin Fah Kui, will be
leading the delegation for the meetings with non-governmental organisations
(NGOs) in Brussels, the Hague and London.
He said such criticisms would not dampen efforts to develop the
timber-based industries, which had provided jobs as well as earned foreign
exchange for the state.
Len Talif said Malaysia needed to explain the misconceptions of some NGOs
that the country was cutting down forests and replaced them with oil palm
plantations.
"This is not true because the ecology, environment and biodiversity of
areas developed for oil palm cultivation are not affected.
"The country has been unfairly blamed despite producing palm oil for the
world," he said.