All exports of Siamese rosewood out of Cambodia have been illegal since 2013, and the international trade in the precious wood was all but outlawed by the United Nations Convention on the International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) that same year.
However, CITES figures show that trade in Siamese rosewood across the Cambodia-Vietnam border continued to flourish despite the ban, with at least a million cubic metres being registered by the convention’s secretariat as having left the Kingdom for its eastern neighbour.

People unload roseswood from a truck that was abandoned by its occupants in Takhmao earlier this week after a brief chase by authorities. Photo supplied
Tonne of rosewood seized in Takhmao
Phnom Penh Post | 10 November 2016
Police in Kandal’s Takhmao district intercepted a truck
carrying more than a tonne of internationally protected Siamese rosewood
late on Tuesday afternoon.
Seng Kim Khaun, a Kandal province economic crime police officer, said
the seizure took place in Kampong Samnanh commune. The Korean-made
1.5-tonne truck, which had no licence plates, had just crossed the river
from Phnom Penh across Takhmao Bridge.
“We followed it for about 2 or 3 kilometres, but the truck was
getting faster. When we reached it, the driver had gone,” Kim Khaun
said.
Officers were acting on a tip from a paid informant, who had spotted
the truck that afternoon. “He saw a truck without number plates and
entirely covered, and he reported it to us, for which we gave him around
$10,” he said.
He added that he believed the driver had intended to carry the wood to Vietnam via National Road 2.
All exports of Siamese rosewood out of Cambodia have been illegal
since 2013, and the international trade in the precious wood was all but
outlawed by the United Nations Convention on the International Trade in
Endangered Species (CITES) that same year.
However, CITES figures show that trade in Siamese rosewood across the
Cambodia-Vietnam border continued to flourish despite the ban, with at
least a million cubic metres being registered by the convention’s
secretariat as having left the Kingdom for its eastern neighbour.
Kim Khaun said both truck and timber are being held by the Takhmao
Forestry Administration office, whose representatives could not be
reached.
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