Background:
Cambodia claims illegal timber trade to Vietnam over
The Vietnamization of Kampuchea: A New Model of Colonialism (Indochina Report, October 1984)
Part II: Vietnamization of the Economic Framework (continued)
The Unequal Exchange
It is within this new institutional framework that theVietnamese are asserting their hold over the economy andfuture of Kampuchea. Fisheries, rubberand rice are the three main sectors affected by what should be termed the Unequal Exchange between Vietnam and Kampuchea.
. . .
Timber Smuggling on the Rise in Cambodia's Ratanakiri Province
RFA | 26 April 2016
The smuggling of illegally cut timber from northeastern Cambodia’s
Ratanakiri province to Vietnam has dramatically increased since around
April 17, with smugglers traveling the roads between the two countries
day and night, sources in the region say.
[Frantic FRENZIED PLUNDERING, as Vietnamization revelation catching up]
Villagers living in the
Sesan commune in Ratanakiri’s O Yadav district have urged authorities
in the capital Phnom Penh to take action against the smugglers, who now
use SUVs and other “luxury” vehicles to avoid detection, one villager
told RFA’s Khmer Service.
“Before the [Lunar] New Year, they used
big trucks. Now they use luxury cars,” the villager said, speaking on
condition of anonymity.
“They go back and forth from six to seven
times a day,” he said, adding, “I am angry, because the air is filled
with dust and I can’t sleep at night.”
Those involved in the smuggling may be members of two land concession companies responsible mainly for protecting local land and its resources, villagers told RFA.
Speaking
separately to RFA, provincial forestry administration official Kep Kot
said that he is now working to investigate accusations of illegal
logging and smuggling in the area, and to ensure that companies
operating as government concessions are working within the law.
“I will ask my officers to verify the information,” he said.
National
Military Police spokesman Eng Hy meanwhile confirmed he had received
reports of increased smuggling in the region, adding, “I have asked
provincial authorities to check on this information.”
Officials
will especially investigate a land concession company called Chang Ly to
see if they are involved in illegally transporting timber, he said.
Cambodia has one of the highest rates of deforestation in the world, largely due to illegal logging.
A
report issued last year by the UK-based environmental rights group
Global Witness found that government and military officials collude with
businessmen to illegally cut and transport Cambodian timber to Vietnam
and China.
While illegal logging continues, forest activists have
faced harassment and jailing by authorities, and in some cases have
even been killed while carrying out investigations into the trade.
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