![]() |
| Environmental lawyer Leng Ouch has been battling for two decades to save Cambodia's remaining forests |
Global prize honours Cambodian illegal logging activist
BBC News | 18 April 2016
An activist's undercover work to
shed light the extent of illegal logging in Cambodia's forests has been
recognised by the Goldman Environmental Prize.
Leng Ouch gathered evidence to highlight how land concessions (ELCs) were being abused and forcing communities from their homes.
His outspoken criticism of the government led to fears for his safety, forcing Mr Ouch into hiding.
In 2014, the government cancelled ELCs that covered 89,000 hectares of forest.
Despite this, Mr Ouch said he felt the plight of the nation's forests was not improving.
"The situation is getting worse year after year," he told BBC News.
"There is no improvement, there is more destruction. There is more deforestation and more demand from overseas.
"We have lost millions of hectares of land through the land concessions."
![]() |
| Deforestation has decimated the nation's forests and landscape / Goldman Environmental Prize |
It is reported that Cambodia has one of the highest deforestation
rates in the world, and just 20-30% of its original forest cover
remains.
One of the driving forces is the demand from nations like
China for high-value hardwoods, such as Siamese rosewood that can fetch
US $50,000 (£35,000) for a cubic metre.
However, the issuing of the ELCs has affected many communities that depended on the land for their livelihoods.
Campaigners say that more than 700,000 people have been driven from their homes as a result of ELCs.
Leng
Ouch's work has taken him undercover and placed him in extreme danger
as he attempted to gather evidence of the impact of the ELCs on forests
and forest people.
Posing as a labourer, he was able to shed light
how the land concessions were being used to provide cover for illegal
operations.
In 2012, a moratorium was imposed on ELCs, but Mr Ouch
argued that it did not go far enough and did not stop forests being
felled and people being displaced.
Mr Ouch explained why he had
spent more than two decades investigating and campaigning to highlight
the injustices he felt he had witnessed.
"There are not many
people in Cambodia that do this kind of work and I felt it was necessary
for me to step in and defend and protect the forests," he observed.
However,
he was aware of the dangers of being an environmental campaigner in
Cambodia and had often gone into hiding in order to avoid unwanted
attention and threats to his life.
Winning a globally prestigious
environmental prize does not remove the dangers. In March, Berta Caceres
- a 2015 Gold Prize winner - was killed by gunmen in Honduras. She had
been a vocal campaigner against a project to build a massive dam across
the Gualcarque River.
![]() |
| Mr Ouch plans to use the prize money to help him to continue his work to protect the nation's remaining forests / Goldman Environmental Prize |
He said he was excited to be one of this year's winners of the
Goldman Environmental Prize - described as the Oscars of grassroots
environmentalism - as it presented an opportunity to tell the wider
world about the situation in Cambodia.
"I hope the world will help us bring about change, and protect forests for future generations," he said.
"I
will use this award to protect and defend the forests, and to ask local
people and the international community to protect these areas."
He added that he planned to use the prize money to help finance his work.
Mr Ouch and five other grassroots campaigners will receive their prize at a ceremony in San Francisco on Monday.



No comments:
Post a Comment