The police in Riau,
Indonesian province that is second-closest to Singapore, have extended its add
to emergency status by another month even as four airports in Sumatra and
Kalimantan stayed shut over the weekend.
Beside that, Indonesian Vice President Jusuf Kalla said
the government was preparing to hold an international conference on peatland
management with the aim of preventing the burning of dry peat, which had caused
the choking add in the region.
Regional Disaster Management Agency ( BPBD ) in the Riau
capital of Pekanbaru decided to extend the emergency as there are still hot
spots in next door South Sumatra province, when significant rainfall has yet to
take place in Riau itself.
“All members of the forest firefighting team have agreed
that the emergency status will be extended by 30 days to Nov 30,” said BPBD Riau
chairman Edward Sanger last Saturday, as reported by the Tempo news website.
He said the judgment was made during a meeting on Friday.
The emergency status, which was set to expire on Nov 1,
extended as officials took into account the possibility of new hot spots
emerging in Riau forests, after watching the continuing conflagration in South
Sumatra and the paltry rainfall seen in Riau so far.
Riau province first declared a haze emergency in the
middle of September when forest fires in the province and the neighbouring
provinces of Jambi and South Sumatra became worse.
“We coordinated with the Meteorology, Climatology and
Geophysics Agency before extending the emergency status,” Mr. Edward said.
He said members of the BPBD team will increase their
efforts to prevent forest fires during the 30 days of the extended emergency
period. The Indonesian province closest to Singapore is the Riau Islands
province, which includes Batam and Bintan.
Meanwhile, Indonesian Transport Minister Ignasius Jonan
said his ministry maintained the closure of two airports in Sumatra and two in
Kalimantan due to the thick smoke from the forest fires last Saturday. The
airports are located in the South Sumatra and Jambi provinces and in South
Kalimantan province, Mr Jonan said in Yogyakarta last Saturday. He had said
recently that the haze had forced the closure of between 23 and 35 airports
across the country.
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