Logs hauled onto a Vietnamese transporter in O'Tang for delivery to Vietnam in February this year. EIA
Vietnamese data show timber exports are continuing
Phnom Penh Post | 23 June 2017
New Vietnamese customs data for April shows timber continued to flow
across Cambodia’s border to Vietnam despite Cambodian authorities announcing a ban on
lumber exports to the country’s eastern neighbour more than a year ago.
The data,
compiled by US-based NGO Forest Trends, suggests about $14 million worth of
timber was registered by Vietnamese customs authorities during that month.
The
volume of timber exports, however, dropped compared to previous months, when
the eastern provinces experienced a major spike in logging, according to a
report by the Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA).
Nevertheless,
processed wood exports remained “substantial”, said Phuc Xuan To, an analyst
from Forest Trends.
According
to the figures, Vietnam imported 21,670 cubic metres of sawn wood valued at
$13.7 million in April, a 27 percent drop compared to February and an almost 50
percent decrease compared to March.
Meanwhile,
the trade in raw logs fell substantially, with only 6,269 cubic metres, valued
at $1.7 million, exported in April, according to the figures, compared to
almost 52,000 cubic metres in March.
Cambodian
police arrested several Vietnamese loggers at the end of March and Xuan To said
the authorities’ intervention could explain the drop in April.
The
arrests, however, appeared to only scratch the surface of what EIA
investigators found to be a “systematic” logging operation backed by Vietnamese
timber traders between November and the end of March, which they estimated
stripped more than 300,000 cubic metres from forests, predominantly in
Ratanakkiri province.
Environment
Minister Say Samal has said the ministry is investigating the involvement of
Cambodian state officials in the operation detailed by EIA, though he yesterday
declined to provide updates on the probe, while also saying he doubted the
accuracy of the Vietnamese customs figures.
Representatives
from Cambodia’s own General Department of Customs and Excise could not be
reached yesterday to verify the numbers.
Cambodia
ostensibly banned exports to Vietnam in January 2016, when Prime Minister Hun
Sen assigned Military Police Chief Sao Sokha to lead an anti-logging task force
to crack down on timber smuggling.
Adhoc
coordinator in Ratanakkiri Din Khany said by phone yesterday that the timber
trade with Vietnam remained constant.
“There is
still wood transported to Vietnam every day,” Khany said, adding that most of
the timber was moved under the cover of darkness.
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