[Backgroun / related]
Timber exports to Vietnam way up
Forest Trends released a report on Friday detailing Cambodia’s timber exports to Vietnam over the past three years that shows a massive increase—from 52,000 cubic meters in 2013 to 436,000 cubic meters in 2015—and a growing use of minor border checkpoints over major international ones to get it over the border.
Alarm over 'timber grab' from Cambodia's protected forests
52-page report by Global Witness
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Timber Inspection Thwarted by Svay Rieng Border Police
Cambodia Daily | 2 June 2016
Forestry officials in Svay Rieng province on Wednesday said border
guards prevented them from seizing and inspecting a trio of trucks
suspected of smuggling luxury wood into Vietnam, flagging the convoy
through despite their protests.
Kul Sovan, who heads the Forestry Administration’s Svay Rieng
cantonment, said two of his officers saw the trucks lined up at the Bos
Morn border checkpoint on Tuesday and asked the drivers to turn around
and park at their office, thinking they might be hiding luxury-grade
timber beneath the acacia wood the vehicles were loaded with.
“The truck drivers refused to turn back, and a border police officer
opened the gate for the trucks to enter Vietnam,” Mr. Sovan said, adding
that the drivers also refused to present a license for their cargo.
“The trucks were transporting the acacia trees illegally because they didn’t have a license for export,” he said.
Failing with the border police, Mr. Sovan said, the Forestry
Administration called deputy provincial court prosecutor Phan Rothana
for help.
Mr. Rothana said the trucks were about 300 meters past the checkpoint
by the time he arrived with approximately 10 military police officers,
and that he was turned back by Vietnamese police when he attempted to
follow the drivers.
“I ordered the drivers to head back to Khmer land for an inspection
of their cargo, but suddenly four Vietnamese police officers arrived and
pushed our forces out of Vietnam,” he said.
“I asked the Khmer border police to contact Vietnamese authorities to
stop the trucks because a crime occurred on Khmer land, but the border
police did not cooperate with us.”
The prosecutor said the court would not be investigating the border authorities, however.
“We are now investigating to find the trucks, and we will stop them
when they return from Vietnam because we know their license plates,” he
said.
Border officials could not be reached for comment.
The government banned the export of timber from Cambodia’s eastern
provinces to Vietnam indefinitely in January, in an apparent admission
that much of the traffic was illegal. Vietnamese customs data obtained
by the U.S. environmental group Forest Trends, however, show that
thousands of cubic meters have continued to make it across the border
each month.
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