00:00:03
At least 120 conflicts have emerged
between palm oil companies and communities
00:00:06
across 17 provinces in
Indonesia in the last ten years.
00:00:12
They are all related to ‘plasma’.
00:00:17
But according to palm oil
industry group GAPKI,
00:00:21
there are no conflicts driven by plasma.
00:00:25
It seems to me, and according to
reports from (GAPKI) members,
00:00:29
they have no problems with plasma.
00:00:34
A two-year investigation by the
00:00:37
BBC, The Gecko Project and Mongabay
00:00:40
found that thousands
of Indonesian families
00:00:42
could be losing billions
of rupiah every year,
00:00:45
because palm oil companies
are failing to provide plasma
00:00:47
in accordance with the law.
00:00:50
You could say that the
oligarchs are getting stronger.
00:01:04
Extreme capitalism is getting stronger.
00:01:10
When the palm oil industry began
to rapidly grow in the 1980s,
00:01:14
companies taking part in government
plantation schemes were encouraged
00:01:18
to provide up to 80 percent of their
plantation for farmers as ‘plasma’.
00:01:25
Over the next 25 years,
the situation gradually changed.
00:01:29
By 2007, a new rule required
all palm companies
00:01:34
to provide a much smaller area as plasma:
00:01:37
only 20 percent of their total plantation.
00:01:43
In the beginning, communities
were promised good things.
00:01:46
For example, they would be given
plasma, land they could cultivate.
00:01:55
The people gave up their land,
which was in the best areas.
00:02:03
But the land they got back
was in a different location.
00:02:08
And plasma is not developed fairly.
00:02:13
It’s not strategically located,
00:02:18
and they are not supported
fully by the companies,
00:02:21
so that communities can
develop the plasma well.
00:02:36
January 2017.
00:02:38
The Suku Anak Dalam or Orang Rimba
from Tebing Tinggi village,
00:02:41
burned a palm oil company’s office
and vandalised their property.
00:02:46
We protested. We gathered
and came to PT Lonsum.
00:02:55
We burned the [security post of] Lonsum.
00:02:59
We wanted to demand our rights.
00:03:02
We demanded our land.
00:03:04
We wanted it back, our
land was taken by Lonsum.
00:03:10
The following night,
the police arrived,
00:03:13
raiding the homes of people they
thought were involved in the protest.
00:03:19
Around 45 people were arrested, including Lina.
00:03:23
After the Maghrib Prayer,
we were here in our room.
00:03:27
The door was smashed.
Police came into our house,
00:03:32
a lot of them. Seven officers
came into the room.
00:03:36
There were five of us in
the room, and they took us.
00:03:42
They arrested us right away.
00:03:48
The community accused
PT London Sumatra, the company,
00:03:51
of not delivering on a
promise to provide plasma.
00:03:56
After we gave up 2,500 hectares
of land to the company,
00:04:04
nothing was returned to us.
They took everything.
00:04:11
The promise was a lie.
00:04:15
Our investigation found
the same frustrations felt by
00:04:18
Orang Rimba were experienced
by other communities.
00:04:22
Using data from the Ministry of Agriculture,
00:04:26
the BBC, The Gecko Project and Mongabay
00:04:29
estimated that private palm
companies have failed to provide
00:04:32
hundreds of thousands of
hectares of plasma since 2007,
00:04:36
when it became a legal obligation.
00:04:39
First, there is no firmness
from the government.
00:04:43
If the government was firm,
00:04:44
of course the
companies would follow.
00:04:47
Second, at the end of the day,
these big companies...
00:04:50
They are greedy. That’s why we
need to regulate with the law.
00:04:54
The global palm oil industry
is worth $65 billion each year.
00:05:03
Some of the profits
come from palm trees
00:05:05
on land that should have
gone to communities as plasma,
00:05:09
but instead has gone
to corporations.
00:05:14
One oil palm company
brought promises
00:05:16
of prosperity to the
Suku Anak Dalam.
00:05:21
But more than two decades later,
00:05:23
this is what they get.
00:05:30
What are you searching for here?
00:05:32
Sometimes we gather five kilos,
00:05:35
ten kilos, of palm fruitlets.
00:05:38
Now, in one day we only get a handful.
00:05:42
We sell them each day
to feed our children.
00:05:46
In 1995, London Sumatra approached
00:05:50
the elders in the Orang Rimba village.
00:05:52
In a scheme now called ‘plasma’,
00:05:55
they would take 2,500
hectares of their ancestral land,
00:05:58
and in return, the Orang Rimba
00:06:01
would get 1,400 hectares back
planted with palm trees.
00:06:07
PT Lonsum said they’re ready
00:06:10
to uphold the rights of the people,
00:06:14
and then we would
become partners.
00:06:19
Now, London Sumatra’s
oil palm plantation
00:06:22
spreads across thousands of hectares,
00:06:24
with tall trees which
produce ‘golden fruits’.
00:06:26
That’s what they call oil palm fruit,
00:06:28
because of the high
prices it attracts.
00:06:32
But the Orang Rimba
lost all of their land.
00:06:37
I used to live around here,
on the land here.
00:06:43
If I wanted to go to the river,
it was just there.
00:06:48
This was where we lived,
back when I was still a child.
00:06:54
For the last three generations,
00:06:56
the Orang Rimba have
lived on other people’s land,
00:06:59
dozens of kilometres away
from where Mat Yadi used to live.
00:07:03
We left this place,
00:07:06
because we were cast
out by the company.
00:07:10
We have to live like this,
00:07:13
constantly on the move like this.
00:07:16
The Orang Rimba have protested since 2001,
00:07:20
to demand the land promised as plasma.
00:07:25
The peak was in 2017.
00:07:28
There was a huge protest,
they burned the posts behind us here.
00:07:36
There was an office, set alight
by the families of Suku Anak Dalam.
00:07:41
Maybe because their emotions
were running high.
00:07:44
In 2013, the conflict between Orang Rimba
00:07:46
and London Sumatra
was mediated by legislators
00:07:48
from the district
parliament in Musi Rawas.
00:07:50
Two years later, the company
agreed to provide the plasma land.
00:07:54
But the promise was not fulfilled.
00:07:58
Then in 2017,
00:08:00
the national parliament
gave an ultimatum:
00:08:03
give back the Orang
Rimba’s ancestral land,
00:08:05
or provide them with plasma.
00:08:08
We were firm, we were tough,
00:08:10
but until now it
hasn’t been done.
00:08:13
They gave up 2,500 hectares,
then the dispute was over 1,400 hectares.
00:08:18
Now they’re being offered 400,
00:08:20
but even that’s not done.
00:08:25
This heavy equipment will
be used to clear the land
00:08:29
as part of the first
phase of 401 hectares.
00:08:33
But the cost of developing the
plantation and acquiring the land,
00:08:38
could be borne by the Orang Rimba.
00:08:40
It will become their debt.
00:08:43
PT PP London Sumatra Tbk is a
subsidiary of Indofood Agri Resources,
00:08:48
owned by the Salim family,
00:08:50
one of the wealthiest in Indonesia.
00:08:54
The BBC, The Gecko Project
and Mongabay
00:08:57
contacted representatives of
00:08:58
Lonsum and Indofood Agri
Resources for an interview,
00:09:01
but both companies
denied our request.
00:09:12
What we asked for was,
00:09:14
first, give the land back
to the Suku Anak Dalam,
00:09:20
without any conditions.
00:09:23
The second best path is
providing 20% plasma.
00:09:28
But without being burdened
with all kinds of costs.
00:09:30
Otherwise it could be a lifetime,
00:09:31
maybe two or three generations
before they can pay it off.
00:09:35
The absence of complete
and comprehensive data
00:09:38
makes it impossible to
accurately assess problems
00:09:41
on a national scale.
00:09:45
But in Central Kalimantan
province alone,
00:09:47
government data indicates
the plasma shortfall
00:09:51
reaches 100,000 hectares -
three times the area of Surabaya.
00:09:56
Central Kalimantan
accounts for just one-fifth
00:10:00
of Indonesia’s corporate-run
oil palm plantations.
00:10:04
We estimate that communities
in Central Kalimantan
00:10:07
are losing more than $90 million,
00:10:10
or 1.2 trillion rupiah, every year,
00:10:13
because palm oil
companies aren’t meeting
00:10:15
their legal obligations
to provide plasma.
00:10:18
Meanwhile, our analysis of data
from the Ministry of Agriculture,
00:10:22
which was shared with us in 2021
00:10:25
and criticised as incomplete
by the National Audit Agency,
00:10:28
indicates the national shortfall
00:10:31
could be many times larger.
00:10:38
Meanwhile on the ground,
conflicts continue to erupt.
00:10:41
Another study released in 2021 found
that out of 150 land conflicts
00:10:46
between communities
and oil palm companies
00:10:49
across four major palm
oil producing provinces,
00:10:51
57 percent related to plasma.
00:10:55
Community members were arrested
in 42 percent of these conflicts,
00:10:58
with 789 people arrested in total.
00:11:04
Like what happened in
Buol Regency, for example,
00:11:09
because the company
involved the police and army,
00:11:17
the people were criminalised.
00:11:20
The people give up their land,
00:11:22
but only get a small
plantation in return.
00:11:27
And they get nothing from it.
00:11:30
So how can the people not be angry?
00:11:34
It’s lucky if the people do not get mad.
00:11:36
If the farmers still
have a lot of other land
00:11:40
or a source of income,
it’s not a problem.
00:11:44
The problem is,
they have nothing else.
00:11:47
And for many of them,
00:11:49
plasma is their only
hope to earn a living.
00:11:58
Protests were not only carried out
00:12:00
by communities that didn’t get plasma.
00:12:03
Our research revealed that since 2010,
00:12:06
62 palm companies have been accused of
00:12:08
sharing limited profits from
plasma with communities
00:12:11
and not being transparent about why.
00:12:15
One of the reasons being
that it’s confidential.
00:12:25
From South Sumatra,
I travelled to West Kalimantan.
00:12:28
Here, a palm company is
said to have broken
00:12:31
their promise to share the
profits from plasma with farmers.
00:12:38
Some of the farmers there
ended up in prison
00:12:42
after they protested.
00:12:43
But then some of them
sued the company
00:12:48
to get back their land.
00:12:50
One of them is Rita Dihales.
00:12:53
Let’s meet him.
00:13:20
We put the banner here,
00:13:21
at the border of the
land we gave up in 2009.
00:13:30
In 2009, PT Palmdale
Agroasia Lestari Makmur
00:13:34
held discussions about
a plasma partnership.
00:13:39
The company said there will
be jobs and economic growth.
00:13:50
The BBC also contacted
the company via phone
00:13:54
and in writing to request their comments,
00:13:57
but we received no response.
00:14:01
The plasma scheme in Teluk Bakung
00:14:04
used a model known as One Roof.
00:14:06
In this model,
00:14:07
the plantation is managed
entirely by the company.
00:14:11
Land owners will receive a share
00:14:13
when the plantation is profitable,
00:14:16
on average from five to ten years
00:14:19
after planting begins.
00:14:23
There was nothing,
00:14:25
not even a single rupiah.
00:14:31
Because they
breached the agreement.
00:14:35
They said there’s a bailout (advance),
00:14:38
but I cannot take it
00:14:40
because we were in
a legal battle with them.
00:14:43
And the bailouts would just
become more debt to us.
00:14:52
From cleaning the land, planting, plant care,
00:14:58
they will add to our debt.
00:15:01
If we took the bailout, more debt.
00:15:02
When will it be over,
00:15:04
we already have hundreds
of millions (of rupiah) of debt.
00:15:10
After 2014.
00:15:12
That’s when we felt that
we were nothing anymore.
00:15:19
That’s when we came
to believe the company
00:15:23
was not going to
deliver what it had said.
00:15:29
In 2017, Rita Dihales single-handedly
00:15:32
stopped a truck full of crops,
00:15:34
belonging to Palmdale.
00:15:38
For that, Rita was
imprisoned for six months
00:15:41
on charges of confiscation and misconduct.
00:15:45
Life is hard.
00:15:49
I thought, all this time we are relying
00:15:51
on the government of Kubu Raya,
00:15:54
but it turned out we
couldn’t depend on them.
00:15:58
From behind bars,
00:16:00
Rita hit on the idea to sue Palmdale,
00:16:02
with four other farmers.
00:16:06
At the time,
00:16:07
our friends wanted us
to join and we agreed.
00:16:12
We would try to sue the company.
00:16:14
Because they have
breached the agreement.
00:16:17
They lied to us.
00:16:22
In August 2021,
00:16:24
the Supreme Court decided the case
00:16:25
in favour of the farmers,
00:16:27
holding that PT Palmdale
had reneged on
00:16:29
its promise to share the
profits from plasma.
00:16:32
Oh, you can say that
I was very happy,
00:16:35
because I will not pass on my
00:16:37
problems with the company.
00:16:38
It stopped with me,
00:16:41
I gave the land to them
and I got it back.
00:16:44
So, my children and grandchildren
00:16:47
will not inherit the same trouble
00:16:49
that I have gone through.
00:16:51
What is your plan with the land?
00:16:56
After the decision is implemented,
00:16:58
we will use the land
for our livelihood.
00:17:01
We will use it to live.
00:17:05
But in Teluk Bakung village,
00:17:06
there are still more than 900 farmers
00:17:09
locked into plasma
contracts with Palmdale.
00:17:12
One of them is Laurensius Asia.
00:17:16
They offered us a partnership scheme.
00:17:20
For all the land we gave them,
00:17:22
we’d get 30% back as plasma.
00:17:26
With that 30%,
00:17:29
the cost for establishing
the plantation
00:17:31
will fall on us.
00:17:34
Including for infrastructure
and other costs.
00:17:37
That became our debt.
00:17:39
We’ll make repayment
from the yields,
00:17:41
once the plantation is productive.
00:17:45
Financial data we obtained
00:17:47
from the Teluk Bakung cooperative
00:17:49
showed that by 2019 the debt
00:17:53
had reached 262 billion rupiahs
[$18 million],
00:17:57
or almost 93 million
rupiah per hectare.
00:17:59
All of which have to
be paid by the farmers.
00:18:03
Frustrated, they held
another protest in 2019.
00:18:11
As a plasma farmer,
I have to fight for my rights.
00:18:16
But in this context,
00:18:20
we didn’t know what
we were allowed to do,
00:18:24
and it turned out what
we did was a crime.
00:18:33
We locked the doors.
00:18:37
We forced (the company)
to stop any activities,
00:18:41
and so I was put in
jail for ten months.
00:18:44
We only wanted fairness
from the government.
00:18:49
We live in Indonesia,
00:18:51
the government should be protecting us.
00:18:55
But the government commonly
takes the approach
00:18:58
of mediation to resolve such conflicts.
00:19:04
As small people,
00:19:07
we also wanted to
do what Mr. Rita did,
00:19:11
but are we capable?
00:19:14
So, as small people,
if the local government
00:19:19
does not help us in
demanding our rights,
00:19:25
we feel that it will never happen.
00:19:29
Well, we can’t meddle
because the partnership
00:19:32
is between the communities
and the company.
00:19:34
If the government takes legal action,
00:19:36
or provides access to legal action…
00:19:38
we have to be in the middle.
00:19:42
There’s no way we can facilitate it.
00:19:45
The community who feels aggrieved
00:19:49
must pursue it through the courts.
00:19:55
The national government appears
00:19:56
to have been aware of
problems with plasma
00:19:59
since at least 2019.
00:20:03
A year before,
00:20:05
236 advocacy organisations
and labour unions
00:20:07
wrote an open letter to the
00:20:09
president of Indonesia
and the European Union,
00:20:11
accusing palm companies
of using plasma
00:20:14
to take over community lands.
00:20:16
In 2018,
00:20:18
President Joko Widodo
released a moratorium
00:20:20
on the issuance of new
oil palm plantation permits.
00:20:23
A year later,
00:20:24
President Jokowi urged his administration
00:20:26
to expedite the process
of resolving land disputes,
00:20:29
even though he didn’t specifically
mention plasma conflicts.
00:20:33
Concessions that were given
00:20:34
to private and state-owned companies,
00:20:37
f there’s a village in the area,
00:20:39
there’s a community,
00:20:41
who have lived there for years,
00:20:43
and they wanted to be a
part of the concession…
00:20:49
Whoever has the concession,
give it to them.
00:20:55
Give it to the community, the village,
00:21:01
give them legal certainty.
I’m telling you,
00:21:03
if the concession holder makes it difficult,
00:21:05
take away the permit.
00:21:08
But in many parts of Indonesia
00:21:09
land disputes, including those
linked to plasma, go on.
00:21:13
The moratorium halting new permits
00:21:15
for oil palm plantations was not optimal.
00:21:17
We contacted the Minister of Agriculture,
00:21:19
Syahrul Yasin Limpo,
00:21:21
and Minister of Environment and Forestry,
00:21:23
Siti Nurbaya for interviews.
00:21:25
Both did not respond to our request.
00:21:28
Ten officials from
four different ministries
00:21:29
were tasked by the president
00:21:31
with implementing the moratorium,
00:21:33
but they refused or did not respond
00:21:35
to our interview requests.
00:21:37
The intent of the presidential instruction
00:21:40
was to improve governance
00:21:42
and raise productivity.
00:21:43
But unfortunately it did not go well.
00:21:45
They created an instrument for improvement.
00:21:50
But in practice on the
ground there was nothing.
00:21:54
Four years after
00:21:55
the presidential instruction was issued,
00:21:57
the Ministry of Agrarian Affairs
00:21:59
said the task force they created
00:22:00
was still trying to get plasma data.
00:22:02
It’s been a mess from the start.
00:22:04
We are trying to tidy
up the [plasma] data.
00:22:05
In the [2020] Job Creation Law,
00:22:07
the existing obligations are strengthened.
00:22:08
The functions of each ministry
must be made clearer.
00:22:11
We need to draft the
implementing regulations.
00:22:14
The will is there,
but we need time.
00:22:19
But we are talking about
00:22:23
agrarian reform in a broad sense,
00:22:26
which has been a national strategic program
00:22:28
for President Jokowi since 2015.
00:22:32
Responding to our
questions via text message,
00:22:34
the Ministry of Agriculture admitted
00:22:36
that the compliance level
of palm companies is weak.
00:22:45
In the last two years,
00:22:47
the Competition
Commission, or KPPU,
00:22:50
investigated ten cases
of companies suspected of
00:22:53
controlling community
plasma plantations.
00:22:57
Some have yet to provide [plasma].
00:22:59
Some don’t even know
where the plasma is.
00:23:01
Some made changes,
so this point was fulfilled.
00:23:08
Some have financial reports,
00:23:12
having started clearing
and preparing the land;
00:23:19
some do not have any.
00:23:21
Some only write down the budget.
00:23:23
But where’s the logic?
00:23:25
The government as a regulator,
00:23:28
it has to be serious to
resolve the conflicts.
00:23:35
So there have to be institutions
00:23:37
or mechanisms that can do it.
00:23:41
Most of the products we
buy from supermarkets
00:23:45
or minimarkets everyday
contain palm oil.
00:23:49
The selling of these products
00:23:51
ranging from snacks and
ice cream to bath soaps -
00:23:55
should also benefit communities,
00:24:00
if palm companies in Indonesia
00:24:03
follow the rules in providing plasma.
00:24:09
Indofood Agri Resources,
00:24:11
the parent company
of London Sumatra,
00:24:13
which owns plantations
on Orang Rimba lands,
00:24:15
supplies palm oil to
00:24:16
Kellogg's,
00:24:17
Johnson & Johnson
00:24:19
and PZ Cussons.
00:24:21
Meanwhile, palm oil from
Palmdale’s plantations
00:24:24
has been purchased by a number
00:24:25
of multinational companies,
00:24:27
including Unilever, Danone, Reckitt,
00:24:29
which owns the Dettol brand,
00:24:31
and Mondelez,
00:24:32
the maker of Cadbury
and Oreo products.
00:24:35
We also found state
oil company Pertamina
00:24:37
allegedly buying palm
oil from companies
00:24:40
that did not provide
the required plasma.
00:24:45
Reporter: There’s a plasma
cooperation that
00:24:47
claims promises were
made by a company.
00:24:49
But the promises
were never realised.
00:24:52
The communities said
this is not fair.
00:24:56
I am speaking on behalf
of GAPKI members.
00:25:01
If that is so,
00:25:02
maybe the companies
are not our members,
00:25:05
I don’t know.
00:25:07
One thing is for sure,
00:25:07
we never have
any reports from
00:25:09
GAPKI members about that.
00:25:11
If the communities
have given up their land,
00:25:13
and they asked for plasma
00:25:14
but the companies did
not develop the plasma,
00:25:16
I think they can sue.
00:25:19
Especially if there
was a written contract.
00:25:23
PT PP London Sumatra
Indonesia Tbk
00:25:26
which operates in Tebing
Tinggi, South Sumatra,
00:25:28
is listed as a GAPKI member.
00:25:31
Meanwhile, PT Palmdale
Agroasia Lestari
00:25:33
is not a GAPKI member.
00:25:36
Reporter: If we found there
were GAPKI members
00:25:40
who have problems
with plasma provision,
00:25:44
what would you do?
00:25:46
I tell you what.
00:25:47
Give us the info,
which companies,
00:25:50
and we will
investigate internally.
00:25:54
We have to know what
the underlying problem is.
00:25:56
For example,
as I said earlier,
00:25:59
the legal obligation
came into effect in 2007
00:26:02
It did not exist before.
00:26:05
The reason they
didn’t build plasma is
00:26:08
because the area
is in a forest area
00:26:10
If it is so, we do
have such reports.
00:26:13
‘We cannot build plasma because
00:26:16
it is located in a forest area.’
00:26:20
If we push them to develop it,
00:26:23
the company will
get into trouble.
00:26:26
The explanation that there
00:26:28
isn’t enough land
for plasma
00:26:30
was rejected by the
palm farmers union.
00:26:34
Actually, what’s debatable
00:26:35
is where the 20%
should come from.
00:26:42
If we’re looking at
the 2007 regulation,
00:26:47
the Ministry of
Agriculture regulation,
00:26:51
a minimum of
20% of the area
00:26:57
should be allocated from
00:26:58
the land the companies use.
00:27:01
So, if the phrase is
00:27:04
‘from the total land used’
00:27:06
it has to be from within
00:27:08
the company’s licensed area.
00:27:10
Because companies
have rights to use
00:27:11
the land if they
have that licence.
00:27:17
Our investigation
team contacted
00:27:18
several multinational
consumer goods firms
00:27:21
whose public records show
00:27:24
they have bought palm oil
00:27:26
from Indofood Agri Resources,
00:27:28
and from companies
that bought palm oil
00:27:30
from a mill that
processed fruit
00:27:33
from Palmdale until 2020.
00:27:35
Unilever said it requires its suppliers
00:27:38
to follow national laws
00:27:40
and sustainability rules
00:27:42
and would consider
suspending purchases
00:27:45
from companies who
break the law.
00:27:47
Kellogg’s, Danone,
and Johnson & Johnson
00:27:50
said they had initiated
a grievance process
00:27:53
in response to our findings.
00:27:56
Mondelēz said they had
spoken to their partners
00:27:59
and experts to
00:28:01
“understand the plasma issues better”
00:28:03
and how their company
can handle the issue.
00:28:07
Reckitt and PZ Cussons
00:28:09
told us that in
addition to investigating
00:28:11
the cases we found
in this investigation,
00:28:14
they would take further steps
00:28:16
to find out whether their suppliers
00:28:18
had met their plasma obligations.
00:28:22
But activists say pressure
00:28:24
from consumer goods firms
00:28:26
might not be strong enough.
00:28:29
Public pressure is an
important component.
00:28:32
When this is published,
00:28:34
the hope is that the public
00:28:36
or the market will respond,
00:28:41
pressuring the palm oil companies
00:28:43
to resolve the issues.
00:28:46
The big homework for
00:28:47
consumer goods firms is how
00:28:49
they can monitor
down to the ground
00:28:53
and ensure their standards
are applied properly.
00:29:01
Because as far as they know,
00:29:03
they have bought
clean palm oil,
00:29:08
palm oil without problems.
00:29:12
But the facts
from the ground
00:29:14
show the palm oil they
buy does have problems.
00:29:18
The consequences
of the plasma,
00:29:21
which I call fake plasma,
00:29:25
is that farmers have lost a lot.
00:29:33
And it has become
a modus operandi
00:29:36
for land grabbing.
00:29:39
The victory of Rita Dihales
00:29:41
against a palm oil company
00:29:43
is an example of how
law enforcement
00:29:46
may be the only way forward.
00:29:47
for communities to regain
00:29:49
the rights to their land.
00:29:52
But to bring back
00:29:53
the initial purpose of plasma
00:29:55
as a tool to alleviate poverty
00:29:56
the government must be serious
00:29:58
in resolving the apparent
chaos in the plasma system.
00:30:01
Don’t let it happen again,
00:30:01
that communities
give up their land
00:30:03
but only companies profit.
00:30:05
In the future,
00:30:06
all companies everywhere
in Indonesia,
00:30:09
please change the
way you behave,
00:30:11
stop harming the little people.
00:30:15
Please change,
00:30:16
we have to believe that
00:30:18
this way of life will continue
00:30:19
for our children
and grandchildren.