Seized Wood Nears End of 120-km Trip
Cambodia Daily | 29 December 2015
After more than a week traveling along remote forest trails in
eastern Mondolkiri province, police and forestry officials transporting
30 large pieces of valuable timber seized from Vietnamese loggers
earlier this month are expected to reach the end of their 120-km journey
today, an official said.
On December 20, border police and Forestry Administration officials
stationed in the Mondolkiri Protected Forest came across a group of at
least five Vietnamese loggers attempting to move a haul of luxury- and
first-grade wood across the border using tractors, according to Keo
Sopheak, deputy chief of the Forestry Administration’s Mondolkiri
cantonment.
“The Vietnamese tractor drivers escaped from our forces back into
their country, about 100 meters from the border, so we couldn’t arrest
them,” Mr. Sopheak said on Monday.
“We seized five tractors with 30 big pieces of wood in [Koh Nhek
district’s] Nang Khylik commune,” he said, adding that the wood—from
rare trees illegally logged in the Mondolkiri Protected Forest,
including Sokrom and Thnong—was now the property of Cambodian
authorities.
“Vietnamese people are often sneaking over the border to cut wood in
the protected forest because the road on the Vietnamese side is very
close,” he said. This allows loggers to quickly and easily cross into
Cambodia and return home before authorities can apprehend them, he
explained.
Mr. Sopheak said the team that seized the wood had made use of the loggers’ tractors to transport it back to the capital of Koh Nhek district—where his cantonment’s headquarters are located—via remnants of the Ho Chi Minh Trail, but that the journey had been arduous.
“From December 20 until now, we have been driving the wood along old
dirt roads built by the Vietnamese during the war,” he said. “But the
remote nature of the area, and the weight of the wood, means the process
has been very difficult.
“One of the tires exploded due to the heavy weight, and tomorrow, we
have one final river to cross before we can deposit the wood at our
office.”
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