INDONESIA WOES CAST DOUBTS ON GUTHRIE PLANTATION D
INDONESIA WOES CAST DOUBTS ON GUTHRIE PLANTATION DEAL
KUALA LUMPUR/JAKARTA, April 5 (Reuters) - Land disputes, demands for agreater share of revenues by local governments and security problems arethrowing into doubt Malaysia's Kumpulan Guthrie Bhd's
ANY REVIEW FURTHER BLOW TO INVESTOR CONFIDENCESome traders in Malaysia said such a review would further underminewaning investor confidence in crisis-hit Indonesia, the world's secondlargest palm oil producer after Malaysia."This will shake anybody's confidence. Who will come and invest inIndonesia after this," said Nakul Rastogi, international trading managerof Pacific Inter-Link Sdn Bhd in Kuala Lumpur.The Guthrie deal was IBRA's second biggest sale after the $1.8 billionit received from selling its stake in Indonesia's largest car maker, AstraInternational in 1999.Salim was once Indonesia's biggest conglomerate and was headed by aclose associate of former President Suharto, who stepped down in disgraceamid the worst economic and political crisis in decades.The plantations cover 265,777 hectares and are located in Aceh, Jambi,Riau and South Sumatra provinces on Sumatra, central and South Kalimantanand central Sulawesi. Guthrie has 110,000 hectares of palm oil holdings inMalaysia and much of its revenues come from palm oil.Industry sources say one of the main problems Guthrie will face isunresolved land acquisition, in which small farmers claim their land hasbeen taken by politically well-connected plantation companies withoutproper compensation.After Suharto's downfall in 1998, many farmers claimed back their landin sometimes violent clashes with plantation staff, while the economiccrisis sparked widespread looting.Bambang Warih Koesoema of the Social Democratic Union, an organisationdealing with local farmers, warned of more problems."It's time for the government to pay back what it had taken from thepeople. People are now very sick and tired. They are very emotional. Iftheir rights are violated again, you know what will happen," he said.
RIAU DISAPPOINTED"Long before the government decided to sell ex-Salim plantation toGuthrie, I asked IBRA to give a chance for people in Riau to buy theplantations located in Riau," said governor Saleh Djasit."IBRA should have taken the opportunity to improve the welfare of thelocal people by selling (plantations) to them. IBRA ignored this becauseit is obliged to get the money for the state," he said withoutelaborating.Resource-rich Riau has asked Jakarta for a greater share in oilrevenues, and much of the plantation area Guthrie would acquire throughits purchase is located in the province.Some analysts said they also wondered how Guthrie would able to manage todeal with security problems in Aceh, where the military has waged waragainst separatist rebels or in central Kalimantan, where 500 people werekilled in February during ethnic clashes.