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Items tagged with: edwrites
I'm drawn to places I don’t know much about and on which there isn't too much online. #Sabah has #Malaysia’s largest expanse of #mangroves and the Lower #Kinabatangan-Segama #Wetlands forms the largest contiguous tract in the southern Sulu Sea, but I had never heard of it before. I was only familiar with the Kinabatangan tourists visit for wildlife-spotting river cruises. So my curiosity started from a very basic place: What does this place look like? How do the people there live?
...This is a reminder not to overlook them. Let's recognise the gifts of nature we have before they're on the brink of disappearing.
Also, do wait for the page to finish loading before scrolling through: https://betweenthelines.my/sabahs-custodians-of-the-mangrove-forests-between-land-and-sea/
& Don't forget to subscribe to BTL if you're interested in Malaysian news. The team publishes curated summaries as well as original reportage "specials" like my story. Sign up here: https://betweenthelines.my
#edwrites #journalism #mangroves #Sabah #Malaysia
Home - Between The Lines
FEATURE Between the Lines co-founder Darshini Kandasamy guests on BFM! Listen now. An email that summarises the main Malaysian news you need to know, with context, bite and wit.Michael Pixl
Here is my multimedia longread for Between The Lines, a Malaysian newsletter run by the indefatigable Darsh Kanda, with edits also by Edward Gomez.
Unlike Wen's, this story explores how we could practice proactive, not just reactive, stewardship. So often, news stories hinge on disasters that have happened, when it is often too late. The Lower #Kinabatangan Segama Wetlands may not be facing an immediately dire threat, but there are threats all the same.
https://betweenthelines.my/sabahs-custodians-of-the-mangrove-forests-between-land-and-sea/
What the future holds: Sabah’s custodians of the forests between land and sea
Writer Emily Ding speaks with fisherfolk along Sabah’s Lower Kinabatangan-Segama Wetlands on climate change, the link between the communities there and Malaysia’s mangrove forest, and why it needs preserving.Emily Ding (Michael Pixl)
As we wrote:
"With this project, we’re attempting to explore a few questions: How effective have [conservation] efforts been and what gaps remain? Can Indigenous communities make a greater case for their economic and conservationist roles, so often underestimated and undervalued? How can local communities and conservationists work with the authorities in common cause? What does proactive, not just reactive, stewardship look like?"
https://rainforestjournalismfund.org/projects/sabahs-mangrove-defenders
#Sabah #Malaysia #mangroves #edwrites
Sabah’s Mangrove Defenders
Southeast Asia is home to a third and most of the world’s mangroves; it is also the region that has experienced the most extensive mangrove loss. In Malaysia, which has nearly 5 percent of the world’s...Rainforest Journalism Fund
Travelling in #Sabah, it's struck me how many #conservation initiatives are funded by #palmoil companies, who have been a major source of #deforestation in the state. I had also noticed many conservationists working with palm oil plantations, in part because they need to access them to better study the #wildlife that are increasingly found to be roaming there. This threw up questions that led to my latest published story: https://www.aljazeera.com/features/2023/6/28/can-plantations-value-more-than-profit-some-in-malaysia-think-so
Can plantations value more than profit? Some in Malaysia think so
Plantation owners in the Borneo state of Sabah are setting aside land for conservation but some remain sceptical.Emily Ding (Al Jazeera)