17 years ago, Bruno Manser, a Swiss campaigner for the rights of the Penan nomads of Sarawak, Malaysia, disappeared without a trace. A new film tells his story. (SRF/swissinfo.ch)
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He had lived with the nomads for six years before fleeing the country with a bounty on his head. He spent the 1990s advocating on behalf of the Penan through his organisation, the Bruno Manser Fund, by giving lectures, writing books and by appearing in films and on television.
A new documentary film “The Borneo Case” shows how his struggle is being continued by his friends and allies. The story, filmed over 25 years, documents the destruction of more than 90% of Sarawak’s forests and investigates where the profits from the destruction went. It begins with Bruno Manser’s disappearance in the jungles of Borneo in May 2000. Manser was officially declared dead in Switzerland in 2005.
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He became a household name in Switzerland in the 1990s when he staged a 60-day hunger strike outside the Swiss parliament to highlight the plight of the Penan. Manser disappeared in the Malaysian jungle in 2000, and a Swiss court declared him dead five years later. The work he began continues through the Bruno Manser…
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If you want to start a conversation about a topic raised in this article or want to report factual errors, email us at english@swissinfo.ch.