Forest patrols duel in Prey Lang
Wed, 9 December 2015 ppp
Daniel Pye and Phak Seangly
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| Members of the Prey Lang Community Network rest on hammocks in a forest after completing a patrol for illegal loggers in the area in 2011. Photo supplied |
“They’re not real Prey Lang conservationists. They prevented us from entering areas where there are illegal sawmills. They did not want us to see illegal logging there.”
As
activists from Prey Lang forest received the prestigious Equator Prize
in Paris on Monday, another, parallel network was asserting itself in
Kampong Thom province – one with close ties to the security forces and
local governor.
The
Prey Lang Forest Community Network (PLFCN), funded by Kampong Thom
Governor Uth Sam An, has allegedly intimidated Prey Lang Community
Network (PLCN) patrols. Activists fear it could be the death knell for a
grassroots environmental movement that has fractured greatly since the
murder of prominent environmentalist Chut Wutty in 2012.
Prey
Lang was named as one of the world’s top 10 “biodiversity hotspots” by
Conservation International earlier this year and supports the
livelihoods of hundreds of thousands of Cambodians, as well as being a
watershed area for the Tonle Sap lake.
But
decades of lax law enforcement coupled with agro-industrial
encroachment has led to the destruction of vast swathes of its
forestland. Community patrols to combat the deforestation were started
in the early 2000s, often led by Wutty himself.
Prey
Lang activists say the PLFCN, backed up by military police, has now
threatened them with arrest if they continue to patrol in the province’s
Sandan district, which has historically sat at the heart of the illegal
logging trade in Prey Lang.
The
head of the PLFCN, a man named Sim Sean, has been accused by PLCN
members of taking bribes and helping to protect illegal loggers –
allegations he denies.
Of
further controversy is that members of his organisation, which Sean
said receives direct monthly payments from Sam An, has also allegedly
received training and equipment from Winrock International, a US
government-funded non-profit founded by the Rockefeller family.
The
PLFCN was formed following a Winrock-funded training session in late
October requested by Sam An. Sean was among those in attendance.
Only
weeks later, a PLCN patrol was intercepted by Sean and a detachment of
security forces and told that they would be arrested if they returned as
the PLFCN was now the only group approved to carry out patrols,
according to Ouch Leng, head of the Cambodian Human Rights Task Force,
who accompanied the patrol that day.
“His
group stopped us and threatened us with arrest . . . He [Sean] thinks
that Prey Lang in Kampong Thom . . . is now under his control,” he
added.
Sean
yesterday said that he had been an activist for 15 years, but as the
forest continued to be lost to the loggers, he decided to partner with
the government instead.
“Now
more officials are co-operating to combat illegal logging, not like
before,” he said. “From now on, our community will not let anyone enter
the area if they criticise us and do not cooperate.”
The
PLFCN “announced that they are funded by Winrock and were given
expensive goods to patrol with”, Leng said, adding that he saw
USAID-labelled cameras and radio equipment being used by its members.
“They’re
not real Prey Lang conservationists. They prevented us from entering
areas where there are illegal sawmills. They did not want us to see
illegal logging there.”
Photos on Sean’s Facebook page show him patrolling in Prey Lang with soldiers and military police and wearing a USAID T-shirt.
In
a statement, Winrock said it has not officially funded either Prey Lang
group as its Supporting Forests and Biodiversity (SFB) project cannot
finance initiatives not registered with the government.
It
said it had provided training to Sean and a number of other community
members in late October at the request of the governor, and attendees
were provided expenses and lodging. It also provided training and
support to an eco-tourism site established by Sean, though this did not
include direct payments.
If
the SFB project had evidence that persons or organsiations it worked
with were involved in illegal activity, it would end the relationship,
but could not do so based on “speculation, rumours or innuendo”.
Marcus
Hardtke, project coordinator for the Rainforest and Wildlife and
Conservation Association, known as ARA, and a longtime backer of Wutty
before his death, said the establishment of the PLFCN was “obviously an
attempt to destroy the work of the Prey Lang Community Network”.
“If
the governor thinks he can give this guy exclusive access rights and
exclusive control over the area, it’s entirely ridiculous and
unconstitutional,” he said. “These goons are running around armed and
throwing their weight about wearing USAID T-shirts.”
“The
political power . . . that’s the real danger. It’s the political weight
of them saying that the American people are behind them.”
PLCN
member Hoeun Sop-heap yesterday encouraged the government to “enter
genuine dialogue” to discuss the future of Prey Lang after he returned
from the award ceremony in Paris.
Governor
Sam An meanwhile said that he had chosen Sean to lead the new group
because “his will is equal to the government’s to combat illegal
logging”.
“They are our eyes and ears keeping watch on the logging and land clearing and making reports to us”.

2 comments:
ធ្វើម្តេចទៅ បើ ហ៊ុន សែន ថាមិនឲ្យកាប់ព្រៃទេ តែដល់ចៅហ្វាយ ចិន យួន គេចង់កាប់ទៅហើយ ទោះឪ ហ៊ុន ក៍មិនដឺងធ្វើអីគេទេ មើលទៅ
គួរអោយកោតសរសើរខ្មែរស្រឡាញ់ទឺកដីព្រៃឈើ តសូរមិនខ្លាចការលំបាកនឿយហត់ ក្ដៅភ្លៀងផ្គរ ឬអត់បាយក្រហាយទឺក នេះជាចិត្តដ៏មោះមុត ។
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