Posted on 26 May 2012
The Sun Daily
KOH KONG, Cambodia (May 25, 2012):
Frustrated by government inaction, Cambodian citizen patrollers are
risking their lives to take on the country's illegal loggers in a bid to
save their shrinking forests.
The shooting of a prominent environmentalist by a military policeman
last month after he refused to hand over logging photos rocked the
kingdom and shone an unflattering light on government conservation
efforts.
Forest communities who depend on the woodlands for their survival say
they plan to keep Chhut Vuthy's brand of grassroots activism alive by
stepping up the patrols he introduced last year to monitor forest
crimes.
"We are all Chhut Vuthy," supporters said at a recent memorial rally
in the remote jungle in southwestern Koh Kong province where the
45-year-old was gunned down.
Rampant illegal logging contributed to a sharp drop in Cambodia's
forest cover from 73 per cent in 1990 to 57 per cent in 2010, according
to the United Nations.
"We must protect the forest before it's gone. The forest is our rice
bowl," 58-year-old Chan Yeng told AFP at the rally, recalling how she
once helped confiscate a chainsaw while on patrol in northeastern Prey
Lang forest, where the livelihoods of thousands of indigenous people are
at risk.
She said the patrols work: after talking to loggers, documenting
their activities or preventing them from benefitting from their
illegally harvested timber, her community has seen a drop in forest
crimes in recent months.
In the past, when Vuthy was still alive, the patrollers even went so
far as to burn hidden caches of luxury timber worth tens of thousands of
dollars.
In what will be their largest coordinated action yet, hundreds of
villagers plan to patrol forests across 10 provinces in June, according
to the Communities Peace Building Network, which coordinates grassroots
forest activities.
Campaigners admit it could be risky but they say forest communities
are willing to put themselves in harm's way because they cannot rely on
the authorities to save the country's natural riches.
"Given the government's inaction or inability to stop illegal logging
and to stop deforestation, I think it now falls to the Cambodian
public to do something," said Ou Virak, president of the Cambodian
Centre for Human Rights.
Government spokesman Ek Tha said he welcomed civilian efforts to help
preserve the country's pristine woodlands but rejected accusations that
it was a sign that authorities were failing to tackle the problem.
"You can't control 100 per cent of the natural resources across the nation," he told AFP.
In its haste to develop the impoverished nation, the government has
been criticised for allowing well-connected firms to clear hundreds of
thousands of hectares (acres) of forest land -- including in protected
zones -- for everything from rubber and sugar cane plantations to
hydropower dams.
Rights groups and environmental watchdogs have linked many of these
concessions to rampant illegal logging, and say armed government forces
are routinely used to act as security guards for offending companies.
Following the outcry over Vuthy's death, Prime Minister Hun Sen
ordered a freeze on new land grants, a move cautiously welcomed by
environmental groups, who nevertheless argue it will not save the
forests already under threat.
For that, campaigners say, more people like Vuthy are needed.
One of them is Prum Dharmajat, 41, a Buddhist monk who lives in Aoral wildlife sanctuary in southwestern Kampong Speu province.
He has quietly dedicated the past 10 years of his life to preserving a
two-by-three-kilometre (1.2-by-1.8-mile) patch of forest near his hut
-- with a few tips from Vuthy along the way.
The area has long been stripped of its valuable trees, but Dharmajat,
whose name translates as "Nature", tries to dissuade loggers from
felling the remaining ones for firewood or charcoal, with some help
from the villagers and children he educates about conservation.
"The destruction of nature is happening too quickly," the orange-clad
holy man told AFP, a gaggle of children swarming around his wooden
hut.
But even for monks -- highly revered in this staunchly Buddhist
nation -- standing between a logger and a lucrative haul can be a
dangerous undertaking.
Dharmajat said he has been threatened many times, and after a recent
visit to Phnom Penh he returned to find several trees felled and 11
peacocks poisoned close to his home, in what he believes was an act of
revenge by frustrated loggers.
Dharmajat is undeterred, however, and said he supported the plans for
more community patrols as an effective tool to deter forest crimes.
But he urged patrollers and those accused of harming the forest to peacefully handle their inevitable confrontations.
"We have to resolve it so that no blood is shed," he said. – AFP
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