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Pahang Govt Making Efforts To Restore Chini Lake

PEKAN, June 26  — The name Chini Lake, better known locally as Tasik Chini and famous for the myth on the presence of a monster that lurks there,  ala the Loch Ness monster in Scotland, is almost on everyone’s lips, despite the place no longer a popular tourist destination like it used to be a few years ago.

Located about 70 kilometers from here, Chini Lake is the second-largest natural lake in Malaysia. It was once known as a floating garden with thousands of white and pink lotus flowers covering its surface. The beauty is now damaged due to pollution caused by uncontrolled logging, mining, and farming activities.

Aware of the potential and importance of Chini Lake, both for tourism and as a national treasure, the Pahang government has drawn up various initiatives to restore the lake’s “glory”.

The initiative to restore the lake began last year when Pahang Menteri Besar Wan Rosdy Wan Ismail announced that the state executive council, on March 13, 2019, agreed to gazette 4,498 hectares of the lake as a Permanent Forest Reserve.

The area involved is not small, as it is nearly the size of almost  6,000 football fields, measuring 110 meters x 70 meters, and reflecting the state government’s seriousness in wanting to restore and preserve the environment at Chini Lake for the future generation.

To address the mining problem there, the state government had also drawn up a special policy for mining activities, which among others, would not approve a new mining lease in the area around Chini Lake.

Wan Rosdy also gave the assurance that any complaints regarding mining activities in the area would be taken up promptly by all relevant agencies, including the Land and Mines Office, Department of Environment, Forestry Department and the Pahang State Secretary’s Office.

Despite all plans been made, it will certainly take time for them to yield results.

Pahang Tourism, Environment and Plantation Committee chairman Datuk Seri Mohd Sharkar Shamsuddin expects the people to be able to enjoy the beauty of Chini Lake again in 10 to 20 years.

“The special policy has been drawn up last year and we are now entering the implementation stage with priority given to maintaining the biosphere reserve status of the lake accorded by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO), as well as making it a destination for eco-tourism.

“We are also planning to carry out forest replanting in the affected area. Apart from that, we also have to wait for the permits given to some mines to operate to expire before the rehabilitation program can be carried out on a larger scale,” he told Bernama.

Mohd Sharkar said the plan to restore Chini Lake had been conveyed to Minister of Energy and Natural Resources Datuk Dr. Shamsul Anuar Nasarah when the latter visited the lake recently to seek the federal government’s cooperation in realizing the effort.

He said work to restore Lake Chini was also supported by Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (UKM), which has a research center at the lake.

The state government, he said, also welcomed any government, private or non-governmental organizations (NGOs) that are keen to participate in the efforts to restore the lake.

“While waiting for the outcome of the forest rehabilitation efforts, the state government will continue to enhance control and enforcement at Chini Lake to prevent any activities that can interfere with our plans to restore the lake’s glory,” he added.

The work to restore Lake Chini is also assisted by an NGO known as the Sultan Ahmad Shah Environment Trust (SASET).

According to SASET general manager Sarhan Ismail, they have planted 5,000 timber trees, such as Balau, Meranti, and Merawan in the area in October 2018.

He said the program was conducted in collaboration with the Pahang Forestry Department, students of higher education institutions in Pekan and residents of Felda Chini, and also involved the participation of  SASET patron, Tengku Arif Temenggong of Pahang Tengku Fahd Muad’zam Shah Sultan Ahmad Shah.

“We expect the trees to take about 15 years to mature and during that time, monitoring will be done by the Forestry Department to ensure no trespassers into the area.

“The program is hoped to restore the natural environment at Chini Lake,” he said, adding that SASET had also planned to plant more trees at Chini Lake this year, but it was disrupted following the COVID-19 pandemic in the country.

Sources: BERNAMA

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