Developers and loggers are threatening to permanently destroy Cambodia's
Prey Lang forest, one of Southeast Asia’s last remaining lowland
evergreen woodlands. One rural woman is leading the fight to save the
region.
When people first meet Mao Chanthoeun, they might not associate this
small, slight woman with the dangerous fight to save Cambodia's Prey
Lang forest.
But appearances can be deceiving.
The 32-year-old has gone from being a traditional farmer in rural
Cambodia to a highly visible and committed advocate for the forest,
although her work toward preserving this natural resource has come with a
good deal of personal sacrifice.
Chanthoeun's fight for Prey Lang is personal; she grew up
along the forest's edges. And her activism comes not just from a desire
to protect the wilderness, it's a matter of maintaining her and her
community's way of life.
"If Prey Lang disappears, my community and my family will lose
everything," she told DW, at a protest in Phnom Penh. "We absolutely
depend on the forest and if it's gone, we will have no way to earn a
living."
A unique natural environment
Prey Lang, which means 'our forest' in the indigenous Kuy language, used
to cover some 3,600 square kilometers across four provinces in
Cambodia's north. But the largest remaining lowland evergreen forest on
the Indochinese peninsula is succumbing to developers' bulldozers and
loggers' saws, which for Chanthoeun and her community spells
catastrophe.
"They get food like vegetables, mushrooms, and honey there but also
traditional herbs for medicine and construction materials," said Seng
Sokheng of the Community Peace-Building Network, a Cambodian NGO that
works on natural resource issues. "It is like the bank for the local
community."
At the moment, weak existing regulations on forest protection are rarely
enforced and international observers have estimated that if the current
rate of deforestation continues, Prey Lang could vanish in two to five
years. That would deprive the nation of a crucial watershed, an
important fish breeding ground and a huge carbon dioxide
absorber.
"The Kuy people also won't be able to make their living collecting
non-timber materials from forest," said Svay Phoeun, a member of this
ethnic minority which makes its home in and near the forest in interview
with DW. "More of us will have to migrate to look for work elsewhere."
Taking a stand
Activist Mao Chanthoeun, who’s one-half Kuy herself, says she
saw several years ago what was happening and decided to take
action.
She began working the local NGOs on environmental issues, learning about
forest issues and the players involved. Slowly, an activist network
began to emerge, which became the Prey Lang Community Network.
Chanthoeun built up a women’s group within the larger organization, and
started playing a more active role. It was unusual in rural Cambodian
society, which is still largely patriarchal.
In 2011, she began participating in forest patrols to stop illegal
loggers. Despite the fact that she was six months pregnant, she joined
others in confronting powerful companies, who often don't look kindly on
activists. Sometimes those involved in the illegal logging are even
armed.
"Of course, I am afraid of being shot sometimes," she said. "But I
simply can't think like that. I'm trying to take care of the forest for
my child’s generation, not just my generation."
Her son was born in the forest in January 2012, and she named him Ros
Prey Lang, which means 'Prey Lang lives.' Just weeks after the birth,
Chanthoeun was back on patrol duty, her son on her hip.
While she has served as an inspiration to many, especially other women,
her activism has taken its toll. Her husband didn't approve of her
activity in support of the forest, asking her repeatedly not to join the
patrols. She didn't listen, and he left her while she was pregnant. Her
activism also takes her away from her small plot of farmland, cutting
into an already modest income.
Uncertain times ahead
Prey Lang still faces huge challenges from agribusiness and a
recently announced railroad, steel mill and port project that could make
conservation in the area almost impossible.
While the Cambodian government did draft legislation in November 2011
that would provide some protection to the forest, Chanthoeun and others
have real concerns about enforcement and some of the draft law's
provisions. They're lobbying the government to allow the community to
co-manage the forest with the authorities.
Despite the uncertainty, Chanthoeun says she remains optimistic that her
son's generation and successive ones will know at least part of Prey
Lang. She says she will continue to farm when she can, but when the
forest calls, she'll put down her tools, and head back into the forest
she loves and needs.
"If this movement stays alive, the forest will stay alive, too," she said.
1 comment:
Bravo gal becareful my dear.May god bless up all the time.Thanks for your courages....
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