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Dompok In Bid To Stop Anti-Palm Oil Bill In Australia
calendar03-08-2011 | linkBernama | Share This Post:

03/08/2011 (Bernama) -- Plantation Industries and Commodities Minister Tan Sri Bernard Dompok and Malaysian timber and palm oil officials have met several Australian lawmakers in Canberra to lobby against a parliamentary move that could threaten Malaysia's palm oil industry.

The Australian Senate last month passed "The Truth in Labelling -- Palm Oil" Bill which is now on its way to the House of Representatives.

The Bill has been pushed by the independent senator Nick Xenophon with the support of the Greens, Zoos Victoria, the World Wildlife Fund and Greenpeace.

Xenophon, with votes from the Liberal-National Party Coalition, was successful in having the Bill passed while the ruling Labor party opposed it.

If the three pro-government independents vote with the Gillard government, then the Bill will be defeated in the House of Representatives preventing it from becoming law.

Xenophon had earlier said he wanted consumers to know if their food contained palm oil, now generally labelled as "vegetable oil"'.

Dompok met Xenophon in Parliament House on Monday and gave a detailed explanation as why palm oil was safe and that orang-utans were protected in Sabah and Sarawak.

He invited Xenophon to visit Borneo Malaysia to get first-hand information.

"I have invited Senator Xenophon and other concerned legislators to visit Malaysia to see first-hand that oil cultivation had not endangered the orang-utans," Dompok told Bernama.

"I told them the orang-utan is a far more protected species now than before because our government and the palm oil industry have done a great deal of work to ensure their welfare and existence.

"Wildlife and Green groups have fed a lot misconception and misinformation to the Australian public about oil palm and the orang-utan."

Dompok said he had met several state and federal ministers and parliamentarians and they understood Malaysia's concerns about the allegations against an industry that employed 570,000 people in plantations and a further 290,000 in downstream industries.

The Minister also said the Greens and wildlife welfare people have deliberately mixed the health and environment issues to win public support for its campaign against palm oil.

"I explained to the Australian MPs and leaders that research had been done in the US, Europe and other parts of the world that palm oil is a safe and healthy product and they accepted the research available," he said.

Dompok is hopeful his visit will be a success and the House of Representatives will throw out Xenophon's ill-conceived bill.

"But before this happens more work has to done to settle the issue," he added.