Try Pheap (logging tycoon) and Say Sam Ol (Environment Minister) close friends |
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Minister’s Environment Day Claims In Doubt
Cambodia Daily | 9 June 2016
Environment Minister Say Sam Al [Say Sam Ol] on Sunday declared an end to
large-scale logging in eastern Cambodia and said the vast majority of
property disputes sparked by land-grabbing sugarcane plantations had
been settled, though NGOs disagreed.
In mid-January, the government set up a special task force to root
out illicit timber stocks across the east and ordered an immediate halt
to all wood exports to Vietnam, a tacit admission that much of it was
illegal.
In a speech marking World Environment Day in Phnom Penh on Sunday,
Mr. Sam Al claimed that the government’s efforts had effectively put an
end to “large-scale” logging and export, leaving only scattered families
cutting down a few trees at a time.
“I can say here, today, at this hour, that the large-scale timber
logging that we used to see is entirely ended and we have shut down the
Cambodia-Vietnam border,” he said. “I can say that large-scale logging
has ended and only small-scale logging remains, like with families.”
Vietnamese customs data obtained by the U.S. environmental protection group Forest Trends
show a significant drop in timber imports since the ban. But they also
show that substantial volumes are still getting through and that the
traffic is once again on the rise.
According to the customs data, Cambodia’s timber exports to Vietnam
dropped from 34,000 cubic meters to 5,000 cubic meters from January to
February but picked up again in March, reaching 10,000 cubic meters
valued at $9 million.
Reports of timber-laden trucks being caught at the border, and sometimes making it through, have also persisted.
Late last month, a truck packed with 11 tons of rosewood was seized
at a border crossing in Tbong Khmum province. Forestry officials in
neighboring Svay Rieng province last week failed to stop three trucks
loaded with acacia trees from crossing into Vietnam because Cambodian
border police refused to help.
Residents along parts of the border have also reported seeing timber
smugglers coping with the export ban by shifting the traffic from major
checkpoints to smaller ones where enforcement is more lax.
Pen Bonnar, a senior investigator with rights group Adhoc, also cast
doubt on Mr. Sam Al’s declaration, noting that it was a common ploy
among practiced timber traders to break down their shipments into small
hauls to pose as small-time traffickers.
“Dealers always pretend to transport timber as if they are a family
going to Vietnam,” he said. “So if it’s a family or a big businessman,
they have to stop it all otherwise the forests will keep being
destroyed.”
During his speech on Sunday, Mr. Sam Al also claimed that the many land disputes involving sugarcane plantations accused of encroaching on local family farms were nearly all settled, and accused rights groups of standing in the way of progress.
Sugar plantations across Cambodia, many of them owned by CPP Senator
Ly Yong Phat and some supplying major food and beverage companies
abroad, are accused of forcing thousands of families out of their homes
or off their farms. Some rights groups have dubbed the country’s
supplies “blood sugar” and called for a boycott.
“When we say this sugar is blood sugar it seems as though we are
breaking our rice pot,” the environment minister said. “This industry is
being built to create jobs for our people, so if they call it blood
sugar we can’t sell the sugar and it is the same as breaking our rice
pot.
“But I can say that we have nearly solved the issue,” he said. “Land
issues are almost over, like in Preah Vihear and in Koh Kong they are
almost ended.”
However, Eang Vuthy, director of Equitable Cambodia, which is helping
some of the affected communities fight the plantations, said the
minister was far from the mark.
“I don’t think this is a fair assessment,” he said of Mr. Sam Al’s remarks.
He said some 200 families in Koh Kong suing American-owned sugar firm
Tate & Lyle in London had yet to settle their dispute and hundreds
of families in Oddar Meanchey province evicted to make way for a
Thai-owned plantation that never got off the ground were also waiting to
be fairly compensated.
Even in Kompong Speu, which Mr. Sam Al singled out as a success
story, 160 families fighting a local sugarcane plantation are still
negotiating compensation with the firm.
“That’s why I say the issue is still there,” Mr. Vuthy said.
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