Hacked with machetes and left for dead: Environmentalist's plan to help women

She stood up to machete wielding thugs in a fight to protect her community from unscrupulous mining companies, now she wants to help other women around the world stand up for their people.

The indigenous Mollo people’s survival is inextricably linked to natural resources, which are considered sacred.

The indigenous Mollo people’s survival is inextricably linked to natural resources, which are considered sacred. Source: Goldman Environmental Prize

Aleta Baun won praise for her environmental activism after defending her Indonesian indigenous community in a battle against mining companies that almost got her killed by machete-wielding thugs.

Now the campaigner is launching a $100,000 fund to help other women fight to protect their communities.

"My dream is to see women speak up, women become leaders to save the environment where they live," said Baun who is affectionately known as "Mama Aleta".

Baun's own fight centred on efforts to stop marble being mined from Mount Mutis on the western part of Timor island, a site considered sacred by her Molo tribespeople, with her activism irking mining companies and local officials.

One night in 2006 while walking home, she was surrounded by a group of men who discussed whether to rape or kill her. She escaped after they took her money and hacked her legs with machetes.

After the attack, she was forced to hide in a jungle with her two-month-old baby girl for months but it did not stop her.

With about 150 indigenous women from her village she staged a peaceful protest, sitting near the mining site weaving clothes for a year until the firms halted operations in 2010.

Her unlikely victory won her the Goldman Environmental Prize in 2013, an annual award acknowledging grassroots environmental activists, which also included $150,000 in prize money.
Aleta Baun
Aleta Baun. Source: Goldman Environmental Prize
Baun is now giving this cash back to the cause she loves by setting up the "Mama Aleta Fund" to help women in rural areas fight for environmental causes by offering financial assistance and legal aid as well as training in leadership.

"I had faced a lot of challenges, threats. I think women like me can come together in our common struggle," Baun, who is in her 50s, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation ahead of the fund's launch next month.

Indonesia is home to about 50-70 million indigenous people, many of whom do not have formal title to the land their families have lived on for generations. This gives little protection when mining or palm oil operations seek to move into their homeland.

Environmental activist Siti Maimunah said the fund is the first in Indonesia aiming to motivate women campaigners.

The women should help to inspire each other," said Maimunah from the Indonesian Mining Advocacy Network.

Baun hopes her success can inspire others. Since winning her fight against the mining companies, she has moved into politics and was elected to the regional parliament in 2014.

"We want to empower women who fight. We want to tell them there will be challenges in every struggle but what is important is they should not be afraid because if our environment is destroyed, it is women who suffer the most," she said.

The Thomson Reuters Foundation 


Share
3 min read

Published

Updated

Source: Reuters


Share this with family and friends


Subscribe to the NITV Newsletter

Receive the latest Indigenous news, sport, entertainment and more in your email inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to SBS’s terms of service and privacy policy including receiving email updates from SBS.

Download our apps
SBS News
SBS Audio
SBS On Demand

Listen to our podcasts
Interviews and feature reports from NITV.
A mob-made podcast about all things Blak life.
Get the latest with our nitv podcasts on your favourite podcast apps.

Watch on NITV
The Point: Referendum Road Trip

The Point: Referendum Road Trip

Live weekly on Tuesday at 7.30pm
Join Narelda Jacobs and John Paul Janke to get unique Indigenous perspectives and cutting-edge analysis on the road to the referendum.
#ThePoint