Celebrating 6 years of Mobilising More for Climate
01 December, 2025
Celebrating 6 years of Mobilising More for Climate
01 December, 2025
Reflections on SDGP webinars: lessons learnt, best practices,…
27 November, 2025
Monday 14 october 2019
On October 6, Golfrid Siregar, a member of the legal advocacy of our partner organization WALHI in North Sumatra, passed away from severe injuries to his head. Although preliminary police reports suggest Golfrid Siregar was injured in a motorbike accident or in an attack by bike-riding robbers, fellow activists question this theory. News site Mongabay reports that the evidence, including severe injuries to his head, indicates he was beaten up elsewhere and his body dumped to conceal the crime.
Siregar provided legal assistance for local communities ensnared in land conflicts with oil palm companies. At the time of his death he was involved in a lawsuit against the North Sumatra government over alleged forgery in the permitting process for a controversial hydropower project that would threaten the only known habitat of the Tapanuli orangutan (Pongo tapanuliensis), a critically endangered species. According to Walhi, Siregar had recently lodged a complaint to the National Police against the North Sumatra Police’s decision to drop the investigation into the alleged forgery.
Golfrid Siregars death is the latest in a disturbing pattern of environmental defenders dying under suspicious circumstances in Indonesia. From 2010 to 2018, there were 171 recorded cases of violence against activists in Indonesia. Most of the victims were environmental activists.
Violence against environmental activists is a worldwide problem. In 2018, Global Witness registered 164 deaths with an average of three deaths a week. Still, this is most likely only the tip of the iceberg: many countries provide unreliable information due to corruption.
Most conflicts that involve deaths are related to mining and large-scale agro-industry, such as palm oil and soy. Logging, poaching and hydropower plants are also a source of conflict.
01 December, 2025
On the 2nd of December 2025 we celebrate 6 years of Mobilising More for Climate (MoMo4C). During the event, we'll close the current chapter on MoMo4C, celebrate our achievements, share insights,…
27 November, 2025
The SDGP Knowledge Exchange Webinar Series, hosted this year by IUCN NL, reNature, and VU Amsterdam, on behalf of the…