By Olesia Plokhii
Reuters
September 20, 2012
People mourning the murder of environmentalist Chut Wutty.
Since Apr. 26, a crusading forestry activist, a muckraking journalist
and a 14-year-old girl have been killed in Cambodia because they tried
to safeguard the country’s dwindling land reserves. They are all victims
of a decade-long battle over Cambodia’s ecological future, a fight that
in the past two years has turned more bloody and corrupt. Their deaths
offer the world a stark vision of how crony capitalism has replaced
totalitarianism as the threat to human rights in Southeast Asia. In
Cambodia, the price of a human life pales in comparison with a blank
check.
I worked at the Cambodia Daily in Phnom Penh for one year
(2011-2012), covering the oil business, land evictions, the environment
and forestry. That’s why I was with Chut Wutty, the nation’s foremost
forest conservationist, on Apr. 26 when he was killed. On the third day
of an investigation into illegal logging in Cambodia’s Cardamom
mountains, we stopped at what Wutty said was a military-controlled
illegal logging outpost. There, he was shot dead during a confrontation
with soldiers who were protecting the site and preventing us from
leaving. A soldier was also shot dead under mysterious circumstances in
the firefight, although Wutty did not fire any shots. When the murderers
began concocting a cover-up, a colleague and I were threatened with
death. “Just kill them both,” they icily said within earshot of us.
After six hours of paralyzing fear and pacing at the scene of the
murder, we were transferred from police custody into the care of our
editor in chief as night fell.
We were lucky. Less than three weeks later, government security
forces fatally shot 14-year-old Heng Chantha during an armed siege
against villagers resisting a land eviction by a well-connected
agricultural company.
Now, the latest victim is Hang Serei Odom, 42, a reporter for a small
Khmer-language newspaper who wrote in early September about military
collusion in the deforestation of a lush region on Cambodia’s northeast
border with Vietnam. His killing was ghastly: He was found dead from two
ax wounds, one to the back of his head, the other to his forehead, and
stuffed in the trunk of his car. A military police officer and his wife
have been charged with premeditated murder after the victim’s shoes were
found in and around the couple’s home.
The state-sponsored violence in Cambodia is a local calamity with
global repercussions. It underscores the ravenous behavior of China as
it scours every corner of Southeast Asia for rare luxury timber and
industrial-purpose woods to feed its booming economy. Although demand is
high for all timber, luxury wood, which differs from industrial-grade
logs due to its elegant appearance, physical makeup and species of
origin, is incredibly valuable, raising the stakes for those harvesting
it. Around the world, 700 activists and others have been slain in the past decade
as they fought to preserve the few scraps of forest and ancestral land
that have not yet been clear-cut by often disreputable multinational
corporations.
China’s hunger for wood is insatiable. It is the number one global
importer of timber, both legal and illegal. According to UK-based think
tank Chatham House, it shipped $3.7 billion in stolen logs in 2008.
Cozying up to corrupt politicians and offering millions in no-strings
cash, Chinese lumber concerns have decimated vast swaths of Cambodia and
since 2000 have imported large amounts of illegally procured timber
from Russia, Papua New Guinea, Malaysia and Indonesia. In all, 6,200
square kilometers of forest –an area twice the size of Rhode Island –
have been gutted in Cambodia in the past two decades, and the Chinese
are behind the most extravagant development projects.
Malaysian, South Korean and Vietnamese firms are also involved in the
clear-cutting. Along with Chinese companies, their ability to buy
agricultural and mining concessions in ostensibly protected forests has
prompted the environmental group Global Witness to describe Cambodia as a “mafia state.”
The murders of Odom and Wutty are terrifying messages that exposing
timber bandits can be a death sentence. Since 2005, at least three other
journalists have been threatened with retribution for their coverage,
and an activist has been hacked to death.
“Cambodia’s donors must use their influence to force the government
to change, rather than propping up a corrupt and violent regime,” Global
Witness founding director Patrick Alley emailed me after learning of
Odom’s slaying. “How many more deaths will it take?”
Sam Lawson of Chatham House says forests around the world will be
“worse than they are now” in the next decade. The impact will be seen in
climate change, displacement and a world bereft of trees. “The illegal
logs still being cut each year, laid end to end, would stretch ten times
around the Earth,” noted a Chatham House report authored by Lawson.
Nigeria, Thailand, Indonesia and Vietnam are also badly gutted,
according to global experts.
What is to be done about blood wood? It’s not just a problem abroad.
America is the top importer of illegally sourced wood products. Most
illegal timber, everywhere, is used as plywood or veneers for commercial
and home construction. But illegal loggers increasingly target luxury
timbers like rosewood, which are shaped into guitars and fine furniture
before ending up in the United States and Asia. Although the U.S.
government took a tough stance on Gibson Guitars for buying illegal
rosewood and ebony from India and Madagascar, many more luxury pieces
can be traced back to the very forests that activists and journalists in
Cambodia seek to protect.
Odom, who leaves behind a pregnant wife, was working in a province
notorious for wildcat logging and had just written about an army police
officer who was transporting illegally cut timber. Typically, that wood
would be ferried by oxcart and military vehicle into Vietnam, then on to
China, before landing in America. It will make a lovely sounding guitar
that will drown out the screams from the land of its origin.
The international community remains unwilling to pressure the
government of Prime Minister Hun Sen to end its connivance with lumber
profiteers despite repeated outcries from Cambodia’s oppostion party.
Yet foreign donors provide Cambodia with half its annual budget. This
consigns the country’s fabled forests to a death by a thousand cuts.
“Without forest we would have no access to clean water as the source
of life,” Chut Wutty said in an interview several months before his
murder. “Forest is like the skin covering our body.”
And Cambodia is being skinned alive.
PHOTO: People light candles at the killing site of Cambodian
anti-logging activist Chut Wutty in Koh Kong province May 11, 2012.
About three hundred people traveled to the Cardamom Mountains in Koh
Kong province, in Southwestern Cambodia, to investigate alleged illegal
logging and commemorate the death of slain prominent environment
activist Chut Wutty. Communities, affected by deforestation, wanted to
show the government that they will continue fighting even though their
activist was killed. REUTERS/Samrang Pring
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