NGO Publishes More Evidence of Illegal Logging Operation
The Cambodia Daily | 18 May 2017
The U.K. NGO that last week exposed a major new timber trafficking
operation between Cambodia and Vietnam has released more evidence in
hopes of supporting Phnom Penh’s investigation into its claims,
including invoices from Cambodia-based companies breaking the country’s
timber export ban.
Using
undercover teams, the Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) found
Cambodian authorities in Ratanakkiri province colluding with Vietnamese
companies to illegally log protected areas on an industrial scale and
smuggle the timber across the border, in breach of a blanket ban on
timber exports to Vietnam that has been in place since early last year.
Invoices
and packing lists for timber shipments to Vietnam prepared by companies
based in Cambodia, dated after a timber export ban to Vietnam took
effect in January last year. (EIA)
EIA estimates
that at least 300,000 cubic meters of timber worth about $75 million
made it across the border during the latest dry season, helped along by
millions of more dollars in bribes on either side.
The report
corroborates Vietnamese customs data— which shows timber continuing to
flood across the border—that Cambodian authorities have been denying
since the export ban took effect. After taking a few days to digest the
report, Environment Minister Say Sam Al said on Sunday that an
investigation into EIA’s claims was underway.
Yesterday, EIA posted a trove of additional evidence to its website to aid the government’s efforts.
“Cambodia
can use this information to put an end to the denials issued by some
government officials that the trade is even occurring,” Jago Wadley, EIA
senior forest campaigner, said by email. “The information will be of
use in a targeted investigation on the ground, and can clearly inform a
formal request of Vietnam to disclose information it holds on the
trade.”
The
new evidence includes: copies of Vietnamese government records giving
16 of the country’s companies permission to fill a 300,000 cubic meter
quota with Cambodian timber; official Vietnamese customs records
detailing its imports; customs and tax documents for
specific shipments; and a few sales invoices and packing lists. There
are also GPS coordinates for the Vietnamese timber depots EIA visited
just across the border and satellite images published in its report.
Most
of the records are in Vietnamese. But a few are in English. They
include invoices and packing lists from three Cambodia-based companies
supplying buyers in Vietnam.
The three companies are Wood Innovation & Import Export, Phat Sok Chea Trading Development, and Pich Rithsey.
None
of the companies are currently registered with the Commerce Ministry,
and none could be reached for comment. Two of them list addresses in
Ratanakkiri matching the records published by EIA.
Wood Innovation lists a Phnom Penh address that is currently under construction. That address used to house the Cambodian headquarters of the Vietnam Rubber Group, the local representative of several state-owned Vietnamese rubber companies with plantations in Ratanakkiri.
[See: ]
The Rubber Group has since moved to a new Phnom Penh address. An accountant for the group contacted yesterday, Kum Lida, said she had never heard of Wood Innovation, or either of the other two Cambodian-based companies in the records published by EIA.
The Rubber Group has since moved to a new Phnom Penh address. An accountant for the group contacted yesterday, Kum Lida, said she had never heard of Wood Innovation, or either of the other two Cambodian-based companies in the records published by EIA.
Mr.
Sam Al, the environment minister, said he was not aware of the new
evidence. He said he would look at it, but declined to say anything else
about the government’s investigation of EIA’s claims.
“We have to look into everything in detail,” he said.
Mr. Wadley, of the EIA, said Cambodian authorities should start making arrests and pressing charges if its investigation is to be taken seriously.
Mr. Wadley, of the EIA, said Cambodian authorities should start making arrests and pressing charges if its investigation is to be taken seriously.
“Laws
have been broken on a major scale and any government worth having would
demonstrate that rule of law applies by applying the rule of law,” he
said.
“Cambodia’s
government now has a fantastic opportunity to demonstrate it can and
will apply the law fairly and judiciously in response to irrefutable
evidence of lawless- ness facilitated by government corruption,” he
said.
If
Prime Minister Hun Sen’s government fails to take that opportunity, “it
will look like it is either incompetent or involved [or both!],” he said.
Environmental
activist Ouch Leng, who has investigated the recent illegal logging in
Ratanakkiri himself, was skeptical that any ranking officials or
oknhas—an honorific the government bestows on wealthy Cambodians in
return for donations to the state—behind the logging operation would
suffer.
“Authorities
arrest the poor people only, but the oknhas and powerful people
involved in forest crimes are not arrested and always get protection,”
he said. “I don’t think the government will arrest the oknhas who do the
illegal logging and smuggle timber to Vietnam because it would involve
many high-ranking government officials.”
When
a large illegal logging operation in Ratanakkiri was uncovered by the
World Bank in 2005, nearly a dozen local officials received hefty prison
sentences.
But
many of them were tried in absentia and never caught. One of them, a
former provincial governor, was recently pardoned at the prime
minister’s request. He did not serve a single day in prison.
Sol
Noeuy, who lives in Andong Meas district’s Talav commune, near one of
the sites where EIA found Vietnamese logging activity, said yesterday
that fellow villagers searching for firewood came across Cambodian and
Vietnamese loggers still working in the area a few weeks ago.
“The loggers told our villagers that…the logs were being transported to Vietnam,” he said.
Like Mr. Leng, Mr. Noeuy said he has little hope of seeing any of the logging ringleaders behind bars.
“I
think the government will not arrest the loggers or the people involved
because the crime has been going on for a long time,” he said. “They
always protect the loggers.”
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