Vietnamese move might hinder logging in Kingdom
Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc on Monday called for
the closure of 2.25 million hectares of natural forest in the country’s
Central Highlands as well as the shuttering of wood processing
facilities across the country, regional news outlets reported.
But while the move drew praise from some local environmentalists
impact, what, if any, it might have on an illegal timber trade that has
for years sent a steady flow of logs worth billions cross Cambodia’s
eastern border, remains an open question.
“The impact to Cambodia could be negative or positive,” Bunra Seng,
country director of Conservation International, said yesterday.
“Negative if the Vietnamese government just closes [the plants] in
Vietnam but does not stop the imported timber from Cambodia or Laos at
the border; positive if Vietnam is really transparent and strict in
[monitoring] its import, export and processing.
“That [would be] great and lead to illegal logging in Cambodia and Laos decreasing sharply.”
Phuc Xuan To, a policy analyst for Forest Trends for Vietnam, saw
little that was positive, however, saying the Vietnamese prime
minister’s comments didn’t make sense given that a logging ban has
technically existed in Vietnam since 2013.
Even the closing of the closing of the processing plants would not mean much for Cambodian logging, he insisted.
“Imports of wood from Cambodia [to Vietnam] are increasing, and 80
per cent of those imports are rosewood, which is exported to China,” he
said. “There would be no impact.”
In January, Prime Minister Hun Sen called for a crackdown
on illegal timber smuggling to Vietnam. Four months later, government
officials announced that the trafficking of timber to the country had ceased completely, an assertion widely dismissed at the time by environmental activists working in the eastern border provinces.
Six weeks later, a visit by Post reporters showed a seemingly thriving ongoing trade,
with local smugglers describing scores of trucks headed for the border,
at times, they said, facilitated by police or military officials.
“The Cambodia government has already closed the timber trade to
Vietnam [because there's no more timber!], so it’s a very good time for Vietnam to close the factories,”
said Chhith Sam Ath, country director for the World Wildlife Fund,
expressing confidence in the government’s disputed claims about the
crackdown’s efficacy.
Meanwhile, posts on the Ministry of Environment’s Facebook page
yesterday said that patrols taking place on June 19 and 20 had
confiscated 2.5 tonnes of wood, one chainsaw and one truck in the Phnom
Oral Wildlife Sanctuary, and warned of people transporting wood out of
the protected area.
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