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| A group of people drag a police vehicle out of a Kratie military police headquarter yesterday before reclaiming two confiscated transport trucks containing pepper posts. Photo supplied |
Timber traders haul off van in showdown at military police headquarters
Nearly 100 timber traders stormed Kratie town military police
headquarters yesterday afternoon in an attempt to liberate two vans
filled with confiscated timber, according to military police spokesman
Eng Hy, whose account matched footage published online.
At 11pm the previous night, military police and Forestry
Administration officials executing a warrant issued by the Kratie
Provincial Court intercepted a convoy of 10 vans loaded with wood bound
for Vietnam, according to provincial military police commander Phat
Sopheak Veasna.
Approximately 30 drivers and passengers from the remaining vans
exited bearing sticks and iron bars to face-off with officials, but
seeing they were outgunned, instead emptied their cargo to block the
road, Veasna continued.
As officials attempted to remove the lumber blockade, the nine vans
whose drivers were uninjured attempted a getaway. Eight escaped while
one was immobilised following a collision with a Forestry Administration
vehicle.
The following day, the timber traders descended on the provincial
military police headquarters demanding the vans and their cargo be
returned.
Video footage released on local media outlet Fresh News shows a large
crowd first wheeling one van out through the military police compound’s
front entrance. The entrance is then blocked by a blue and white
military police vehicle, which the crowd simply drags out of the way,
allowing the second van to be wheeled out after it.
“Put simply, they stole the evidence. The vans are gone,” Veasna
said, adding that he was preparing a report to be sent to the provincial
court today which will name 10 individuals, identified through photos
of the incident, accusing them of damaging state property and tampering
with evidence.
Deputy provincial prosecutor Hak Horn said the court will summon
individuals suspected of involvement one by one for interrogation once
he receives Veasna’s report.
“I have taken the photos as evidence. A criminal offence was
committed by many people, and the forestry crimes have not even been
accounted for yet,” Horn said.
Veasna said the crowd was insisting that the confiscated timber was only low-grade material to be used as supporting posts for pepper trees, but that this was not the case.
“In fact, it’s not pepper posts. It is number one [luxury] timber
that has been cut like pepper posts. They were transporting it to sell
in Vietnam,” he said.
Seng Sokheng, secretariat coordinator of NGO Community Peace-Building
Network, said that while it was good to see authorities cracking down
on the illegal timber trade, they should be more even-handed in doing
so.
“We want to see the government respect the law and not only catch the
people who have no power. They should arrest the powerful [people] and
tycoons and send them to jail,” Sokheng said.
Provincial Adhoc coordinator Din Khanny noted that there is a lack of
transparency in the policing of forestry crime and that many timber
transporters are intercepted but later released after paying a bribe.
Yesterday’s commotion has precedent. In January, police in Preah
Vihear released a community representative from detention after protesters blocked the road in front of the provincial hall with 10 tractors.
In 2012, 500 Kratie province villagers successfully sought the release of a village representative with the help of a roadblock.

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