Luxury wood found buried
A Chinese-owned firm in Stung Treng province has been accused
by local officials of illegally felling more than 150 endangered trees
and burying the luxury timber in a vast plantation nestled between the
Sesan and Srepok rivers.
“We saw many holes, and so we sent a bulldozer and [Forestry
Administration] workers are unearthing it,” Sambath said, adding that
the workers had so far found 154 pieces of Thnong wood along with
several other varieties of protected tree.
More than 70 pieces of timber were transported to Kbal Romeas and
Srekor communes’ Forestry Administration offices over the weekend,
Sambath said.
“Burying the timber does not comply with the law; it seems the company is trying to hide from the authorities,” he added.
Siv Guek’s economic land concession (ELC) lies less than 10
kilometres from the Lower Sesan II hydropower dam site, where complaints
over illegal logging led the government to suspend a Royal Group
logging concession in October last year. Siv Guek’s land concession
overlaps in several areas with logging concessions for the Srepok II
reservoir, according to mapping data from Open Development Cambodia.
According to the Ministry of Agriculture website, Siv Guek was
granted a 10,000-hectare economic land concession in the Sesan district
on January 24, 2006, to plant a number of cash crops, including rubber
and acacia trees.
A Siv Guek employee, who did not give his name as he was not
authorised to speak to the media, yesterday claimed the firm had not
broken any laws, and said he had legal documents to show it had been
granted the rights to log and bury the wood. The employee added that the
wood was buried to protect it from the sun.
“Those logs need to be buried in order to protect them from forest
fires and sun light, since they will be cracked or the quality could be
damaged,” he said, before hanging up the phone.
But Marcus Hardke, program coordinator for German conservation group
ARA, said that every aspect of the local officials’ allegations, if
true, would be a breach of Cambodia’s Forestry Law.
“This is a common scenario. There’s no interest from the authorities
in stopping it and everyone profits from it. It’s too late for rosewood,
they’ve already moved onto the next species, Thnong,” Hardke told the
Post.
“Land concessions are not even supposed to be issued in forests, but
the companies just claim there’s no forest there. Logging endangered
tree species is illegal under the Cambodian law on forestry, and they
are deliberately not demarcating the concessions so that this kind of
thing can happen.”
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