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Anne Kajir, environmental award winner and lawyer, fights for the 
Paradise Forests.

Anne Kajir, environmental award winner and lawyer, fights for the Paradise Forests.

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Papua New Guinea — Many Australians would be shocked to learn that their new timber deck or outdoor furniture could well be made with stolen timber from some of the last remaining rainforests on the planet. Young lawyer, Anne Kajir, who has just won a Goldman Award, the world’s top grassroots environment prize, wants us to know just that.

Anne’s message is clear – our consumption of timber products is causing the Asia Pacific region's dwindling forest areas to be logged out of existence.

Nearly 10% of timber imports to Australia are illegally logged in countries close to home (like Papua New Guinea and Indonesia, including Papua), according to a recent Australian Department of Agriculture, Forests and Fisheries report

As a law student in PNG, Anne witnessed the damage illegal logging does to forest communities and the habitats they rely on for survival. Since then, she’s dedicated her life to helping custodial landowners fight the multi-national logging companies trampling their rights and ripping off the land.

In her acceptance speech at the Goldman Award ceremony in San Francisco, Anne told an international audience that the cancer of illegal logging has spread right to the top in PNG:

    "Papua New Guinea is famous for its corruption, which permeates all levels of society. This corruption is fuelled by greed of multinational corporations who are hell-bent on stealing resources from its traditional custodians. …This is our fight, in the face of a seemingly unending appetite for the raw natural resources.

    How can anyone call it development when the land is raped for profit and the benefits of a few? Is it development when our country has to go begging to the international community because our natural resources are being exploited and our people left destitute?"



Anne won a landmark court case in 1997, that saw a forest community awarded a million dollars (2.3million Kina) in compensation. The long fight put Anne at serious personal risk. She was physically attacked and intimidated a number of times, and even received death threats. Legal files were stolen when her house was broken into, while she and her son slept.

Despite the risk, Anne says she will continue to keep up the fight. "At the end of the day it’s about these people, it’s about the future, and I can’t stop until we get something right," she explains. "Just seeing them being treated so badly – being forced to sign contracts at gunpoint, being beaten up by police that are supposed to protect them – I can’t bear that."

    "I hope that by sharing my story, Australians will think of me the next time they buy wood. And of the people, animals and birds that depend on these forests for their lives.

    I call on the Australian people to help me stop the plundering of my country by buying only wood that can be guaranteed to have come from sustainable sources."



Details of the The Goldman Awards




VISIT: Our Paradise Forests weblog