Opinion Cambodia’s Crackdown On
Illegal Logging Leaves Room For Doubt
| 3 February 2016
Cambodian press and some environmental groups
have largely viewed the national government’s creation of a committee
to curb an illegal wood trade as a sign of real progress. But upon
closer inspection, the federal crackdown may be more of a shakedown.
Kerstin Canby, the Director of Forest Trends’ Forest Trade and Finance
Program, explains.
Last month, Cambodia’s prime minister created
a national committee charged with curbing illegal wood trade on the
country’s eastern border with Vietnam, and the government and military
conducted raids to seize illicit timber and investigate high-profile
business leaders allegedly involved in the trade.
While the Cambodian press has described the move as a “crackdown” and some environmentalists hailed it as a “good first step” toward curtailing illegal logging, there may be much less than meets the eye going on here.
At first glance it might appear that the Cambodian government is
taking a principled stand on forest protection. Revelations that timber
exports to Vietnam, alone, reached
US $386 million in 2015 – 50% higher than the previous year – were made
more shocking by evidence that this trade was mostly illegal and
largely targeted at the country’s rarest and most endangered wood
species.
But observers familiar with the situation insist that the campaign’s
true motives can be traced to simmering rivalries and jostling among the
most influential players in Cambodia’s logging sector.
It appears likely that this latest effort to disrupt illegal logging,
though highly publicized, represents less of a “crackdown” and more of a
“shakedown.” The whole episode might be no more than the latest turf
war between Cambodia’s biggest logging cartels to re-negotiate how the
fruits of illegal trade get divvied up.
One cause for skepticism is a 2014 agreement
granting logging baron Try Pheap the exclusive right to buy up wood
confiscated by the Cambodian government at below-market prices.
Obviously, such a scenario removes any illusion of protecting the
forests.
As recently as November 2015, the prime minister went to bat for Try Pheap and another tycoon when he publicly denied allegations
that the two had illegally logged in a national park along
Cambodia’s borders with Vietnam and Laos. And soon after the government
began its new campaign, The Cambodia Daily reported that one Facebook
user found himself embroiled in a defamation lawsuit after posting allegations that the Hun family was complicit in the illicit wood trade.
Another reason to remain wary is the lack of information emerging
from these high-profile military raids. Weeks after the formation of the
illegal logging committee, we’ve yet to see any official statement
about the outcome of the crackdown – what was confiscated and where. As
one skeptical lawmaker put it, “The crackdown is like a storm. It will last only a short period of time and [then] be gone.”
Those misgivings about whether illegal actors would be held
accountable were reinforced last week, when stockpiles of timber in an
eastern province were burned in a suspected attempt todestroy evidence of wrongdoing. The Phnom Penh Post cited
accusations by local residents linking the wood to businessman Seong
Sam Ol, whom the government has reportedly identified as a primary
target of the crackdown.
The fact that this latest campaign does explicitly target at
least some of the most powerful of the tycoons – a privileged class
regarded by many as “untouchable” – is what sets this episode apart from
similar spectacles in the past. The crackdown might reveal an
escalation of infighting within that group. But don’t be surprised if,
in the end, it’s the smaller loggers and low-level actors who get caught
up in the dragnet, while the big players are left alone to consolidate
their monopoly on the illicit trade and renegotiate the balance of
power. Previous “crackdowns” that followed that pattern have failed to produce meaningful results.
One thing is certain: We won’t see real change until the true
orchestrators of illegal logging are held accountable. As long as these
high-level culprits continue to operate in the sector, Southeast Asia’s
most precious forests remain under imminent threat, and any sustainable
forest management or protected area scheme is bound to fail.
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