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Prey Lang network says authorities profit from illegal logging + Villagers in court over bulldozer


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Political and business elites have been directly involved in and profited from illegal logging in the Prey Lang forest in northern Cambodia, according to a new report from members of the Prey Lang Community Network.

The 142-page study, titled Our Forest Remains Under Destruction and released yesterday, says law enforcement and forest management officials consistently fail to act in the face of illegal activity in the forest, for which they also lack concrete prevention measures.

“The role played by authorities such as police, environmental and forest administration officers is not preventing timber from being transported, but amassing money from illegal timber transporters,” the report states.

According to the report, abuses are found in all of the 33 communes in Prey Lang, with illegal logging exacerbated by legitimate loggers operating outside their licences.

“These illegal acts should be punished under the law,” said Sar Mory, vice president of the Cambodian Youth Network NGO. “They have no right to log, but they log anarchically without anyone stopping them.”

Mory said more than 40 large- and small-scale sawmills involved in the activity have been uncovered, with government officials often complicit.

Ruos Lan, a community representative in Kratie – one of the five provinces the forest extends into – said that while environmentalists have been criticised for aggressive acts such as burning chainsaws, inaction on the part of authorities had forced such radical moves.

He also said complaints that activists did not consult officials before engaging in activities designed to catch forest criminals or stop their work were unfair, given the level of corruption in the area.

“How can we inform them when the offenders are police and commune and village officers? So I want to arrest thieves, do I have to inform those thieves in advance?” he said.

Forestry Administration director Chheng Kimsun could not be reached for comment.

Speaking at a Ministry of Agriculture ceremony on April 8, Prime Minister Hun Sen recently declared forestry crimes a major problem and lamented the inability of authorities to effectively prevent them.

But according to analyst and political aspirant Kem Ley, the key to prevention lies in withdrawing responsibility over the forests from corrupt authorities and handing it to local communities, who should receive incentives such as conservation jobs. “Hand the land back to the communities, they can protect it,” he said.

http://www.phnompenhpost.com/national/prey-lang-network-says-authorities-profit-illegal-logging

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Villagers in court over bulldozer ‘detention’
Tue, 28 April 2015

At least eight villagers in Preah Vihear’s Tbeng Meanchey district have been ordered to appear in court for questioning in relation to allegations that they illegally detained two bulldozer operators working for Chinese concessionaires Lan Feng and Rui Feng.

Six of the accused were present at the court yesterday, and two more are scheduled to appear today. On December 29, about 100 villagers engaged in a land dispute with the Chinese sister companies intercepted two bulldozers allegedly clearing farmland and resin trees in Brame commune. After about 24 hours, the two men were released and the machinery was turned over to authorities.

Khan Roeung, a representative of the ethnic Kuoy community in Brame, said that villagers’ actions had not been inappropriate.

“We did not detain them; we only prevented them from clearing our land and delivered the two bulldozers to Brame commune office,” he said.

However, Ung Tingkong, a translator for Lan Feng and Rui Feng, said that the community members had threatened the two drivers with weapons.

“The two drivers were so scared since the indigenous [community] used knives and axes to threaten them,” he said.

Deputy provincial prosecutor Long Sitha said that the point of the questioning was to determine who made the threats. But Lut Sang, a land project coordinator with NGO Ponlok Khmer, said he witnessed the incident and saw no one threatening the bulldozer operators.

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