Dam site still logged: NGOs
NGOS have accused logging tycoon Try Pheap’s MDS Import-Export
Company – which had a licence to clear forest during the construction of
the Stung Atai hydropower dam in Pursat – of continuing to log the area
despite the dam being finished.
Ouch Leng, director of the Cambodian Human Rights Task Force (CHRTF), said he and officials from two other NGOs visited the dam site last week and observed logging in the area.
“The [Stung] Atai hydropower dam is operational and the reservoir is
full, so why does the company still log wood?” Leng said. “In fact, they
are just using the licence as an excuse.”
Two other NGOs – the Natural Resource Protection Group and another
that did not want to be named due to fear of repercussions – accompanied
CHRTF members on the visit and supported Leng’s claims that logging was
continuing around the Chinese-built dam in Veal Veng district.
Documents seen by the Post show that the Ministry of
Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries approved a request in 2009 for MDS
to collect wood from the area while the dam was under construction.
“[T]he ministry agreed with the request of the Forestry
Administration by permitting … Mr Kev Chann Thorn, representative of MDS
Import and Export, to collect wood … at the Atai hydropower dam,” reads
a letter from the ministry, dated May 4, 2009.
Leng said that due to a lack of transparency in the bidding process,
Pheap was able to buy the timber for just a fraction of what he would
have been able to sell it for.
According to the same document, inked by ministry secretary-general
Lor Rasmey, MDS was permitted to pay only $189 for every cubic metre of
luxury timber it took from the site. Certain grades of luxury timber can
fetch thousands of dollars per cubic metre.
One of the unnamed NGO workers who went to the site last week said he
saw up to 20 MDS trucks transporting timber out of the dam area and
along National Road 4.
“The activity is completely illegal, but they say they are restoring the area. How can forest remain?” he said.
A representative of MDS Import-Export, who asked not be named, denied
the allegations, saying that the company’s contract finished last year.
“How can we log in Pursat province? There are international
conservation groups such as CI and Wildlife Alliance that monitor very
strictly and use planes to check the middle of the forest,” he said.
Pheap, who has licences to clear economic land concessions across the
country, has been accused of cross-border timber smuggling and forcing
the eviction of more than 1,400 families in his quest for ELCs.
Rasmey and Khorn Sareth, a senior Forestry Administration official, could not be reached for comment yesterday.
No comments:
Post a Comment