Sand dredgers moored off the Chroy Changvar peninsula last year near Phnom Penh.Hong Menea |
Singapore’s data mirrors UN’s in Cambodia’s sand export numbers
Phnom Penh Post | 19 October 2016
Singaporean customs data on sand
imports from Cambodia show near identical figures to those recorded by the UN,
which last month were dismissed by a top official amid a reporting discrepancy
in the hundreds of millions of dollars.
The UN data showed
$752 million in imports of sand from Cambodia since 2007, despite Cambodia
reporting only about $5 million in exports to Singapore.
However, customs
data obtained from Singapore’s Trade Ministry yesterday for half that period –
2011 to 2015 – are for each year the same as the UN Commodity Trade Statistics
Database figure, and show Cambodia exported $405 million of sand to Singapore.
Where the UN data
showed $91.29 million of sand from Cambodia to Singapore in 2011, the customs
data – converted from Singaporean to US dollars at that year’s average exchange
rate – show a near identical $91.32 million of arrivals of Cambodian sand.
The government
recorded only $707,843 of total sand exports to every country in the world that
year, according to figures from the Commerce Ministry.
For 2012, the UN’s
data show $69.27 million leaving Cambodia for Singapore, whereas Singapore’s
customs data show $69.33 million. Cambodia recorded only $457,647 of sand
exports to all countries that year.
The figures match
for every subsequent year, with the most sand sold in 2014. In that year, UN
data record $127.76 million of sand leaving Cambodia for Singapore, and the
Singaporean data show $127.81 million. Cambodia recorded only $70,883 of sand
exports that year.
Unlike the UN’s
data, which note both the volume of exported sand and also the value, the
Singaporean customs data note only the value.
Prime Minister Hun
Sen in 2009 banned the export of dredged river and marine sand from Cambodia –
except for where the sand was obstructing waterways – but the status of that
ban has since been unclear, with many large-scale dredging operations
continuing unabated.
Tina, the Mines and
Energy Ministry spokesman, who last month also called use of the UN data
“unprofessional” and told a local media outlet the disparity could be due to
different valuation methods on each end, declined to comment on the customs
data yesterday.
“Why do you keep on
asking the ministry to accept the figure declared by . . . we
don’t know which institution? Why don’t you ask the owner to comment on their
figure?” Tina wrote in an email, denying that the differences may suggest
something illegal occurred.
“How did you get to
this logic? It’s more constructive if you can provide concrete proof showing
illegal activity and the perpetrators,” he said.
Tina said six firms
had licences to export sand. He did not respond to questions about the status
of the 2009 ban.
Singapore’s embassy
in Phnom Penh also did not respond to a request for comment. However, an
embassy official said earlier this year that the export of sand from Cambodia
was a commercial matter and did not involve the Singaporean government.
Alejandro
Gonzalez-Davidson, the founder of the NGO Mother Nature who was deported in
February 2015, said in an email he believed the hundreds of millions of dollars
of sand exports were being hidden to protect companies like CPP Senator Ly Yong
Phat’s LYP Group from rebuke.
Neither Yong Phat
nor representatives of the LYP Group could be reached for comment yesterday.
“Those high up in
the government who are organizing and abetting this crime, together with
partnering cartels such as the LYP Group, want to ensure that their criminal
activities are not widely uncovered, primarily so that they can continue smuggling
sand,” Gonzalez-Davidson said.
“The government
should immediately place a moratorium on all further sand extraction activities
along coastal estuaries of Cambodia. Then relevant government authorities
should take a trip to fishing communities affected by the mining and go from
house to house apologizing for these last nine years of thievery.
“After, they should
publicly apologize to the entire nation for this total scam, and then start
returning the hundreds of millions of dollars that have been pillaged from the
nation,” the activist added.
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