The country’s a multimillion dollar timber smuggling operation is fueled primarily by China’s high demand for luxury wood for furnishings.Rights groups have charged that illegal logging is rampant in Cambodia and often occurs under the protection of government agencies or influential people.
Cambodian Authorities Question Six People in Deadly Forest Attack
RFA | 10 November 2015
Authorities in a northern Cambodian province on Monday rounded up six
suspects for questioning in the killing of two officials and wounding
of another who were on patrol in a preserved forest area, in the latest
apparent confrontation between illegal loggers and officials, provincial
police said.
The six own chainsaws that the three officials confiscated on Friday while they were patrolling the forest for illegal logging activities.
Authorities sent five of the men were to the Forestry Administration
office and the last to police headquarters in Preah Vihear province for
questioning.
Authorities have not yet identified the suspects, who are being
questioned about an incident early Saturday in which a group of unknown
gunmen equipped with AK-47 rifles ambushed officials on patrol in the
Preah Roka Protected Forest in Choam Ksan district, Preah Vihear
province.
The group killed police officer Sap Yuos from Chheb district and
Forestry Administration official Seang Narong, and wounded border
police officer Phet Sophoan as they slept in hammocks in the forest.
the trio was on patrol on behalf of the Wildlife Conservation Society
in Bonh village in Choam Ksan district.
“They, the officers, were committed to [fulfilling their tasks] and
sacrificed themselves bodily and spiritually, including their lives, to
protect national treasures,” he said. "I regret their deaths very
deeply."
Nongovernmental organizations, rights groups and forest community
activists in Preah Vihear voiced concern and regret over the incident.
Activist groups requested that the government and Preah Vihear’s
authorities investigate the case and arrest the perpetrators, so that
they don’t have to perform their duties in fear of being shot in other
forest communities.
Pich Poin, an officer from the Network of Community Activities in
Preah Vihear, said he suspected that illegal loggers were responsible
for the crime.
He also said the attack was a threat to authorities and activists
trying to protect the forest from illegal deforestation, a rampant
problem throughout Southeast Asia.
“We encourage the government to investigate [the case], and seek to arrest those who committed the crime and violence,” he said.
Lor Chan, the Preah Vihear province coordinator for local rights
group Adhoc, condemned the act and said authorities should do their
utmost to find the armed men who killed the rangers to bring justice to
the victims’ families.
“[First,] I understand that this is a serious case of human rights
abuse,” he said. “Second, it is a threat to those who are trying to
protect and preserve the forest.”
Investigating the scene
Officers at Preah Vihear's police headquarters said a team of
investigators examined the scene of the shooting 10 hours after the
incident occurred and transported the victim’s bodies out of the forest.
Keo Chamroeun, deputy provincial police chief, said he disagreed with
a declaration by investigators searching for evidence to identify the
gunmen that robbery was the motive.
“This case is not a robbery case because all the belongings of the
victims were still there,” he said. “Their money, cameras and cell
phones were found at the scene.”
The three forest protection officers had confiscated chainsaws and
other equipment from one group of illegal loggers before the attack
occurred, sources from forest protection groups in the province’s Tbeng
Meanchey district said.
At the scene, authorities spotted several fired bullets from the
AK-47 rifles that the gunmen used to shoot the officials, they said.
Forestry Administration director Chheng Kim Sun said it had been
about 20 years since a logger had shot dead an administration official, The Cambodia Daily reported.
The illegal logging of timber largely from protected areas and
national parks is pervasive in Cambodia, despite strict laws protecting
rare and luxury tree species, which have been in effect since 2002 to
reduce massive deforestation.
The country’s a multimillion dollar timber smuggling operation is
fueled primarily by China’s high demand for luxury wood for furnishings.
Rights groups have charged that illegal logging is rampant in
Cambodia and often occurs under the protection of government agencies or
influential people.
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