“The poverty-reduction policy of the government seems to be just to kill the poor people,” Leng said.
[Meanwhile, across the Hun Sen Park, it could be heard: "Once you killed all the poor people, there's no more poor people and poverty has been reduced. Duh! Why do you think we called it 'poverty-reduction'?!" Chided our Dear Leader in a private conversation with the mentally-slow Commies in the group. Slowly, a glimmer of light pierces through the beer-infected eyeballs, and an explosive, "Hahaha! LOL! Hahaha! LOL!" could be heard in the sealed, heavily-guarded, dimly lit smoked-filled chamber. "Idiots! You don't say 'LOL', you write it!" the Dear Leader muttered, sharing a piece of vital information he learned the hard way, a chiding from his grandchild.]
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Defender of Cambodia’s dwindling forests wins Goldman Prize
Associated Press / Seattle Times | 17 April 2016
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) — The latest crackdown on illegal logging
in Cambodia is “just a game” and big timber traders are winning, says
Ouch Leng, a former government official who has spent two decades
helping poor villagers fight poaching of precious tropical forests.
Leng’s tenacious and perilous crusade to stop illegal logging and
stop land concessions from forcing Cambodians out of their homes has won
him a Goldman Environmental Prize, which honors grassroots
environmental activism.
The
award follows recent announcements that Cambodian authorities plan to
expand protected areas of the Southeast Asian country’s forests by about
a third. Long-ruling Prime Minister Hun Sen, whom many consider a
backer of the biggest logging group, Try Pheap, recently said he had
authorized rocket attacks on illegal loggers.
But Ouch Leng (ook leng) and other critics say
reports of raids and other high-profile shows of force against illegal
loggers belie the lack of arrests or prosecutions of those cutting and
trading in illegal timber.
Asked if the crackdown is for real, he said, “It’s just a game.”
“Nobody was arrested. The media was set up,” Leng said during an
interview. “The Ministry of the Environment doesn’t care. They never go
inside the jungle to patrol or arrest illegal loggers.”
Much of the timber trade is protected by military units that profit
from deals with the loggers, and the stakes of fighting it can be
deadly. At least five deaths in Cambodia have been linked to illegal
logging since 2007, including that of Leng’s fellow environmentalist
Chut Wutthy, who was fatally shot in 2012 while showing journalists a
logging camp in the southwest’s Koh Kong province.
Leng said he accepts the risks as part of his mission.
“I don’t expect the government to allow me to live long,” he said.
Leng wins $175,000 for this year’s Goldman Prize, as do five other winners:
— Zuzana Caputova, a lawyer who led a campaign to shut down a toxic waste dump in Slovakia.
— Maxima Acuna, a Peruvian farmer fighting major mining companies’ efforts to take her land for a gold and copper mine.
— Destiny Watford, a Baltimore, Maryland, student who helped prevent construction of a trash incinerator in her area.
— Edward Loure, a Tanzanian communal land rights leader.
— Luis Jorge Rivera Herrera, who campaigned to create a nature
reserve in Puerto Rico to protect endangered leatherback sea turtles.
Leng travels into the forest armed only with a camera and a GPS
locator, tracking illegal loggers. At times he works undercover by
cooking for loggers, hauling cargo on docks or posing as a tourist.
Showing
determination early on, Leng excelled in his studies in mostly rural
Takeo province. When his village chief denied him a permit to travel to
Phnom Penh to take university exams, he says he hid on a sugar cane
train to get to the city. After studying law, he was assigned to the
Foreign Ministry, and later to the Ministry of Planning. Drawn into
politics, he moved to a nongovernmental organization and began
investigating illegal logging.
Marcus Hardtke, a German environmentalist who lives in Cambodia, says the prize is well-deserved.
“Ouch Leng is one of a handful of people fighting to stop forest
destruction in Cambodia,” Hardtke said. “It is up to activists like Leng
and affected local communities to make a stand against the
short-sighted, greed-driven policies of the Phnom Penh elite. They are
doing just that, often at great personal risk.”
Lately, Leng’s attention has focused on a conflict between local
villagers and a Chinese company that is developing a massive resort on a
choice swath of coastland near the Thai border in Koh Kong province.
Residents complain they were forced off their land and lost their
main livelihood of fishing when they were relocated inland after the
government granted a 99-year land lease to China’s Tianjin Union
Development Group Co., which has built a golf resort and plans a yacht
club, casino, villas and other luxury facilities.
“Before, those people could earn $2,500 a year, or about $100 a night
fishing. Now they cannot fish because the Chinese company grabbed
everything. They have nothing to eat,” Leng said.
The United Nations says land rights conflicts have become Cambodia’s
No. 1 human rights issue. Land concessions have forced villagers to make
way for plantations and other projects. Meant to promote development,
such arrangements often have left communities worse off, critics say.
They’ve also accelerated the loss of precious, diverse forests of
increasingly rare tropical timber, as loggers push ever deeper into
protected areas and also clear-cut land of less valuable wood that is
sometimes sold as fuel for factories.
Cambodia remained heavily forested until relatively recently, thanks
in part to lingering battles with Khmer Rouge guerrillas and massive use
of land mines during the Vietnam War.
As the economy opened in the early 1990s, investment from China
poured in. Forest cover dropped to 48 percent in 2014 from 57 percent in
2010 and 73 percent in 1990, a loss of nearly 3 million hectares of
tropical forest. Rosewood, known as “hongmu” in Chinese, is especially
prized, and loggers can get $5,000 for a cubic meter of the
brightly-hued timber.
Leng, who chairs the Cambodia Human Rights Task Forces organization,
says the Goldman Prize money will help support forest patrols and
community-level efforts to combat illegal logging.
Like many in Cambodia, he views the government’s record with skepticism.
“The poverty-reduction policy of the government seems to be just to kill the poor people,” Leng said.
[Meanwhile, across the Hun Sen Park, it could be heard: "Once you killed all the poor people, there's no more poor people and poverty has been reduced. Duh! Why do you think we call it poverty-reduction?!" Chided our Dear Leader in a private conversation with the mentally-slow Commies in the group. Slowly, a glimmer of light pierces through the beer-infected eyeball, and an explosive, "Hahaha! LOL! Hahaha! LOL!" could be heard in the sealed, heavily-guarded, dimly lit smoked-filled chamber. "Idiots! You don't say 'LOL', you write it!" the Dear Leader muttered, sharing a piece of vital information he learned from the hard way, a chiding from his grandchild.]
“Their ‘master plan’ to improve living standards is set up very well
and looks very beautiful. To provide jobs with fair competition and
construction of schools, roads, bridges. … To provide land for the
people and conserve their houses,” he said. But he added that such talk
is generally not put into practice by private companies or the
government.
Still, Leng believes he is making headway in convincing the public to resist the loss of their livelihoods and homes.
“Many political parties, government officials, students and monks are
involved in forest issues,” Leng said. “The revolution will come from
the land and from the forest.”
Goldman Prize: http://www.goldmanprize.org/blog/introducing-the-2016-goldman-prize-winners/

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