The diaries of Bruno Manser, a Swiss environmental and human rights activist, have been donated to the Museum der Kulturen in Basel.
This content was published on
2 minutes
Keystone-SDA/sm
The ethnologist became known far beyond the borders of Basel for his passionate but also perilous commitment to the Penan people of Borneo and the threatened tropical forests they called home. Manser went missing in 2000 and was officially declared dead in 2005.
He left behind 16 diaries in which he recorded his observations and his commitment through texts and drawings. Manser’s family has now donated these books as well as other documents to the Museum der Kulturen Basel.
Banned from Malaysia
Manser was working as a shepherd in Graubünden when he decided to move to Sarawak in 1984. He won the trust of the Penan, adopted their simple lifestyle, and ended up staying for six years before returning to Switzerland – from where he launched a tireless battle against the logging industry and its destruction of the jungle.
The Malaysian government was highly displeased with Manser’s activism, and banned him from the country – though he returned in secret more than once. To draw attention to his cause, Manser resorted to some extreme measures, such as a two-month hunger strike in front of the Swiss parliament and parachuting from a plane with a goat in his arms.
Today, the Basel-based Bruno Manser Fund (BMF) continues the work that Manser started on behalf of tropical forests. Its focus is on helping the Penan people in the Malaysian federal state of Sarawak.
More
More
A moving homage to Bruno Manser
This content was published on
17 years ago, Bruno Manser, a Swiss campaigner for the rights of the Penan nomads of Sarawak, Malaysia, disappeared without a trace.
This content was published on
It is not necessary to define Swiss neutrality more strictly, according to the Swiss government. The Federal Council has rejected the so-called “neutrality initiative”.
Swiss government to improve disaster alert system via mobile phones
This content was published on
The Federal Council wants to modernise the disaster warning system for the population with alerts sent via the mobile phone network and other digital channels.
Poll: most Swiss believe littering is steadily decreasing
This content was published on
Littering is steadily decreasing in Switzerland, according to an annual survey conducted by the Swiss Center of Excellence against Littering.
This content was published on
The Federal Criminal Court has acquitted UBS following appeal proceedings in connection with money laundering charges linked to the Bulgarian mafia. The bank inherited the case from Credit Suisse.
This content was published on
The Swiss Federal Railways (SBB/CFF) timetable change on December 15 will bring improvements for commuters. It will also have new night-time connections on long-distance and regional services.
Swiss launch healthcare initiative to improve working conditions of doctors and nurses
This content was published on
The Swiss authorities have launched an initiative to promote healthcare centres and improve working conditions for doctors, nurses and pharmacists.
Morges fatal shooting: police officer acted in self-defence, prosecutors conclude
This content was published on
The police officer who shot dead a black man at Morges train station in western Switzerland in 2021 acted in self-defence, the Office of the Attorney General of canton Vaud have concluded.
This content was published on
Switzerland has welcomed the announcement of a ceasefire deal between Israel and the Iran-backed group Hezbollah in Lebanon.
Gender wage gap is shrinking in Switzerland – slowly
This content was published on
The gender wage gap is narrowing in Switzerland, although it remains sizeable and partly unexplained: in 2022 women earned on average 16.2% less than their male counterparts.
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.
Read more
More
Author follows trail of Bruno Manser
This content was published on
Basel author Ruedi Suter slogged his way across leech-filled mud trying to retrace the steps of the late Swiss rainforest activist Bruno Manser.
This content was published on
BMF remains one of the few non-Malaysian organisations still campaigning on behalf of the Penan, an indigenous people living in some of the world’s most biodiverse forests in Sarawak on the island of Borneo. Two-thirds of its forests have been destroyed in recent years for logging or to build palm oil plantations. Now the BMF…
Friends gather to “remember” missing environmentalist
This content was published on
Speakers at Wednesday’s meeting made an effort to speak of Manser in the present tense. But it was clear that many had given up hope that he was still alive, a year after he disappeared in the rainforests of Borneo. His last known communication was a letter to a Swiss friend dated May 23, 2000.…
You can find an overview of ongoing debates with our journalists here . Please join us!
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.