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| Former Home Affairs Minister Hari Sabarno during his ongoing trial in the Anti-Corruption Court in Jakarta on Friday. (JG Photo) |
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Bogor.
Influential homeowners in Bogor are reportedly preventing the city’s
administration from acting against 250 dwellings in the Puncak area that were
built in breach of spatial planning rules, along with 12 buildings constructed
without building licenses in a protected forest.
The Bogor
district head, Rahmat Yasin, did not deny that the buildings were improperly
sited.
“There
certainly are those buildings, and they’re still there even though we have been
trying to have them removed,” he said on Friday. “We will involve relevant
parties soon.”
The
district head agreed that the area was a vital rainwater infiltration area for
Bogor as well as Jakarta, farther downstream.
“There has
been a lot of research that demonstrates the decline of the Puncak area’s
capacity as a rainwater infiltration area,” Rahmat said. “The area has been
pinpointed as providing rapid runoff, which leads to flooding downstream.”
Although
Rahmat did not want to reply with specific details when asked about influential
homeowners who live in the area, his deputy, Karyawan Faturah, was more open.
“If we want
to clean up this problem then we are going to need the assistance of the
central government, because a large number of these dwellings belong to ‘people
of influence’ in Jakarta,” he said.
In a 2009
survey, the spatial planning department of the Bogor district administration
discovered 112 unauthorized holiday villas. In 2010 it identified another 163
of them, bringing the total to 275. The villas were built on land plots ranging
from 0.1 hectares to two hectares.
The number
of unauthorized villas was reduced to about 250 in late 2010, after a number of
them were demolished in accordance with government orders.
There have
been no demolitions in 2011, but Yani Hasann, head of the local spatial
planning office, says he wants to recommence the demolitions in 2012.
“We are
rechecking our data to determine which villas we need to demolish,” he said.
“We will form a team to handle the demolitions, which will involve related
agencies such as the forestry department.”
An
additional 12 houses have been constructed in the Gede Pangrango protected forest
area, and some of them belong to former government officials, according to the
Bogor administration.
These
former officials reportedly include Hari Sabarno, a former home affairs
minister who is now on trial for corruption; Sutiyoso, a former governor of
Jakarta; Jaja Suparna, a former military reserve commander; and HBL Mantiri, a
former head of the Udayana Military Command.
Most of the
unauthorized villas were built after the government passed the 2007 Spatial
Planning Law, a 2008 presidential decree on spatial planning and 2008 Bogor
bylaw on spatial planning. These laws all aim to prevent unauthorized
development in Jakarta’s upstream catchment area because it aggravates flooding
in the capital.

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