Ratanakkiri is home to several depots owned by well-known timber magnate Try Pheap, who also runs a dry port next to the O’Yadaw International Checkpoint for exporting large volumes of wood to Vietnam. Despite numerous reports and investigations linking his facilities and employees to the area’s illegal logging trade, Mr. Pheap, who denies any involvement, has never been prosecuted.
Buried Logs Uncovered on Wood Trader’s Property
Cambodia Daily | 1 February 2016
Authorities in Tbong Khmum province on Sunday confirmed finding a
cache of valuable logs buried underground on property tied to a wealthy
local timber trader, part of an ongoing search for illegal wood stocks
across eastern Cambodia.
It follows news that as-yet-unknown arsonists set fire to several
piles of valuable timber in neighboring Mondolkiri province in a
possible bid to destroy evidence last month.
On Sunday, Tbong Khmum Provincial Court prosecutor Heang Sopheak said
that 84 logs of first-grade Sokrom wood were unearthed in O’Reang-ou
district on January 18.
Mr. Sopheak said the wood was found on property that a man known only
as “Oknha Thai” had been using for his timber trading business “for a
long time.”
Despite his position as an oknha—an official honorific approved by
the king and secured with a $100,000 donation to the state—the
prosecutor claimed not to know Mr. Thai’s full name. He also declined to
say how they found the buried timber or why anyone would go to the
trouble of burying 84 large logs if there was nothing to hide.
“I do not dare to conclude the wood in the ground is illegal because
it is up to the experts of the Forestry Administration to find out if
anything is wrong,” he said. “The armed forces are now guarding the wood
and they don’t allow the owner to get inside.”
Forestry Administration officials in charge of the area could not be reached.
The news of the buried wood followed reports a week ago that several
piles of timber stored on the Binh Phuoc 1 rubber plantation in
Mondolkiri had mysteriously gone up in flames. Provincial deputy
prosecutor Chea Sovantheth later put the number of logs damaged in the
flames at 1,909.
Though authorities were quick to suspect arson, they have not put
blame on the Vietnamese-owned rubber plantation on whose property the
timber was stored and burned. The plantation’s manager denies any
involvement.
Prime Minister Hun Sen announced the formation of the task force on
January 15, placing National Military Police Commander Sao Sokha in
charge.
On Sunday, General Sokha visited Ratanakkiri province, a hotbed of
illegal logging where rubber plantation owners have long been accused of
laundering trees logged inside the province’s nominally protected
forests and wildlife sanctuaries.
Brigadier General Hy, also a spokesman for the military police, said
his boss met with local officials, but he declined to say whether the
task force has found any illegal activity or illicit timber stocks in
the province.
Ratanakkiri is home to several depots owned by well-known timber
magnate Try Pheap, who also runs a dry port next to the O’Yadaw
International Checkpoint for exporting large volumes of wood to Vietnam.
Despite numerous reports and investigations linking his facilities and
employees to the area’s illegal logging trade, Mr. Pheap, who denies any
involvement, has never been prosecuted.
On Friday, Mr. Pheap’s eponymous company, the Try Pheap Group, issued
a public statement denying unspecified accusations that it had ties to
the Unigreen Resources rubber plantation in Mondolkiri, which local
officials have accused of laundering wood, according to a National
Police report issued early last month.
After two weeks of visits to rubber plantations and timber warehouses
across the eastern prov- inces, the task force has yet to say whether
it has found a single ill-gotten log.
Environmental rights groups and activists are skeptical that this
latest campaign against illegal logging by the government, which itself
is widely reported to play a major part in the trade, is genuine and
will lead to any meaningful change.
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