Riau, Jambi claim Berhala Island
Riau, Jambi claim Berhala Island
The Jakarta Post
Jakarta
Two neighboring provinces, Riau and Jambi, have been involved in
an intense rift over Berhala Island during the last two months.
Both have claimed the islet which is only 10 square kilometers,
for political, cultural and historical reasons.
Both sides said they were awaiting central government
mediation to solve the prolonged conflict.
The rift that surfaced in 1983 is mounting, following the
recent formation of the Riau Kepulauan regency that included the
islet, and in connection with the tourism development on the
islet which is also near Singapore and Malaysia.
Jambi Governor Zulkifli Nurdin insisted that if seen from the
geographical, administrative and historical perspectives, Berhala
was an integral part of Jambi.
"If Riau said the rift over the island should no longer be
discussed because it was part of its territory, Jambi adversely
issues its own claim," he said in a meeting with students,
activists and journalists in Jambi on Tuesday.
He said the rift must be solved and the island must be
returned to Jambi.
He said he had none of his own interests behind the rift or
the island but his administration was collecting material
evidence and data to support their claim of the island.
Many Jambi people whose ancestors came from the island have
pressed the governor to retrieve the island since the island was
a home for their forefathers and cultural heritage of the former
Melayu kingdom Before and After Christ.
According to Zulkifli, administratively, 12 families living on
the island had identity cards from the Jambi provincial
administration and cast their votes for political parties in
Jambi in the 1982 general election
"This is evidence that the island's 50 inhabitants are part of
Jambi's population and they have interacted with other people on
the Jambi mainland," he said as quoted by Antara.
The island has been under a no-activity status since the rift
erupted in 1983, barring the two provinces from doing activities
on it.
Fachruddin Saudagar, a historian from Jambi University,
concurred and said that according to the Tanah Simpang and Tanah
Kumpeh Hilir charters written in 1211, the island was part of
Jambi.
He said Jambi should retrieve the island, explaining the
importance of the Islamic-Melayu history in the province.
He said that according to history, the island, located 2.5
miles off the Batanghari River mouth in the Jambi regency of East
Tanjung Jabung, was occupied by a king of Turkish-descent, King
Datuk Paduka Berhala in 1321.
From his marriage with Princess Selaras Pinang Masak, Berhala
gained a son named Datuk Paduka Nangsum who was made the new king
of the island. Nangsum married the daughter of Demang Lebar Daun
in Palembang, South Sumatra and they had four sons --Orang Kayo
Hitam, Orang Kayo Pingai, Orang Kayo Pendataran and Orang Kayo
Gemuk. On the island, the four established a town, Ujung Jabung,
which was an embryo for the birth of Islamic Melayu culture in
Jambi.
Meanwhile, Saleh Syari, an informal leader of Berhala Island,
called on the two provinces' governors to seek a peaceful
solution to the rift with the mediation of the home affairs
ministry to give legal certainty on the island's status.
"The government should seek an immediate solution to the
conflict so that the island's inhabitants are certain of which
province they are in," Antara quoted Syari as saying in Pekanbaru
on Wednesday.
According to him, most people on the island had claimed they
are part of Riau.
"In the past, many locals preferred Jambi Province because of
Riau's lack of attention to the island. But, now it is
different," he said without elaborating.
Besides the historical, cultural and political reasons, the
island is part of Riau in accordance with the map made during the
Dutch colonial era.
Directorate General for Public Administration and Regional
Autonomy Soedarsono said the government would immediately
facilitate a meeting between the conflicting provinces to seek a
peaceful solution.
He said the central government had no concept of how such
problems should be solved "but at least we will mediate between
the two sides to seek a peaceful solution."
Soedarsono admitted many such problems had arisen in numerous
provinces in connection with the implementation of regional
autonomy but the autonomy law does not stipulate a solution or
mechanism on how they should be solved.
He cited other examples in Riau in which two regencies had
claimed two resource-rich villages. Also the West Kalimantan
provincial administration and the Sambas regency were in a heated
debate over the salt trade in the province.
He said most regents, experts and legislators were holding a
gathering in Palembang, South Sumatra to make preparations for
the planned amendment of the autonomy law so that such problems
would not arise in the future.
"I don't know yet what changes will be made to the law because
it is still being discussed by regents, experts and legislators,"
he told The Jakarta Post by telephone.