Truck swaps student volunteers for timber
Wed, 9 December 2015 ppp
Khouth Sophak Chakrya
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| Student volunteers participate in a land titling program at Koh Pich in 2012. Heng Chivoan |
Two
military officers were busted yesterday morning allegedly attempting to
transport protected timber through Pursat province in a government
truck previously used in Prime Minister Hun Sen’s land-titling program,
according to police.
Ket
Sarak, a senior official with Krokor district police, said the two
military officers from Preah Vihear province’s Brigade 99 – Yan Rem, 29,
and Ul Sothear, 45 – were arrested at about 6am when police and
Forestry Administration officials uncovered dozens of cubic metres of
protected thnong timber in the back of their truck.
According
to Sarak, the two men said they had been sent out with the truck –
which was previously used to transport student volunteers across the
country to measure and demarcate plots of land – to collect clothing and
food for members of their battalion.
But
the pair admitted that during a rest-stop in Phnom Kravanh district,
they contacted an illegal timber trader and offered to transport the
wood to Phnom Penh for a fee, he said.
“After
questioning, the Forestry Administration experts decided to free those
military officials and handed the vehicle back to their unit. The
timber, which had diameters measuring from 40 to 60 centimetres, were
impounded at Pursat province’s Forestry Administration office,” Sarak
added.
Pol
Chantha, chief of Krokor district’s Forestry Administration, confirmed
that the timber had been impounded at his office but said officials had
not yet measured the exact amount of wood seized.
He said the two suspects had been sent back to their Preah Vihear barracks for “education in the military rules”.
Elsewhere
yesterday, in Ratanakkiri province, military police and Forestry
Administration officials intercepted a vehicle with a Royal Cambodian
Armed Forces (RCAF) licence plate that was attempting to transport
luxury wood into Vietnam.
Keb
Kot, director of the provincial Forestry Administration, said officials
discovered 26 pieces of neang nuon timber in an RCAF-licensed Land
Cruiser.
The discovery came just one day after luxury timber was discovered in a separate RCAF-licensed vehicle.
“The
timber and the vehicles have been impounded at Ratanakkiri province’s
Forestry Administration office where they will stay . . . until the
lawsuit is prepared for the court,” he said.

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