Rosewood-Laden Military Trucks Stopped
Cambodia Daily | 14 June 2016
A convoy of military vehicles loaded with illegally logged rosewood
was stopped by police in Tbong Khmum province on Monday, according to
officials, who were otherwise tight-lipped about the case.
“Police stopped the vehicles this morning in Memot district,” said
deputy provincial police chief Chhem Kim Hong, referring further
questions to Leng Chetra, chief of the provincial force’s anti-economic
crime bureau, who declined to comment.
Memot district police chief Hun Kimhoeun said the convoy was not
pulled over in his jurisdiction, but rather on National Road 7 in
neighboring Ponhea Krek district. Ponhea Krek police chief Orm Monyvan,
however, said he knew nothing about the case.
According to a report posted to the National Police website, the
convoy was comprised of two cargo trucks led by car mounted with a
siren.
“Tbong Khmum provincial police say that after they received
information about the transport of the wood, police experts cooperated
with relevant field units to stop the three military vehicles,” it said.
“Police officials have clarified that the three vehicles were found
with many cubic meters of rosewood and were attempting to transport it
to Vietnam,” the report said, adding that the cargo trucks belonged to
the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces’ Transport Brigade 99, commanded by
Major General Hul Sam On.
Maj. Gen. Sam On could not be reached on Monday.
The National Police report did not say where or when the vehicles
were stopped, whether any arrests were made, or exactly how much wood
was found.
“Even amid a large-scale crackdown on the transportation and export
of luxury wood, smuggling is still occurring, often because of the
involvement of some officials,” it said.
In January, Prime Minister Hun Sen established a military police-led
task force to track down illegal timber stocks in the country’s east,
but the courts have not prosecuted anyone over the roughly 70,000 cubic
meters of wood that have been seized.
In a speech earlier this month, however, Environment Minister Say Sam
Al hailed the effort as a roaring success. “I can say here, today, at
this hour, that the large-scale timber logging that we used to see is
entirely ended,” he said.
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