Environmental Group Links Vietnam's Military to Laos Timber Smuggling
Photo: AFP
The activist groupEnvironmental Investigation Agency (EIA), says Vietnam's military is involved in the smuggling of timber from Laos despite laws banning such exports. Vietnam denies the allegations, saying is working with the Lao government to prevent such smuggling.
The report says an undercover video shot by activists during the past two years shows how logs make their way from Laos to Vietnamese furniture factories.
The report released this week says Vietnam's booming timber industry, worth $4 billion a year in exports, drives illegal logging in Laos, which has some of the last intact tropical forests in the Mekong region.
The EIA report charges the Vietnamese military of bribing Lao officials and then smuggling timber to factories in Vietnam.
The EIA identifies the Vietnamese Company of Economic Cooperation as a major participant in the illegal trade, and says it is overseen by an army branch located in Vietnam's Vinh city.
Researchers Julian Newman says corruption enables the illegal trade to carry on with little benefit to the local community.
"What we have is a total failure of regulation in Laos, it's where these influential businessman can just break the law so openly," noted Newman. "And it's hard to see any benefit really for the Lao people in this industry. Their own factories can't get the timber and the local people have their livelihoods disrupted."
Vietnamese officials have told other media organizations that the Company of Economic Cooperation has a license from the Lao government to import logs.
In 1997 Vietnam banned most domestic logging, and now imports 80 percent of its timber supplies.
The EIA report says timber imports have soared from $123 million in 2000 to over $1 billion in 2008. It says illegal timber for Laos makes up 16 percent of the total.
Lao officials have said in recent months that they are stepping up efforts to halt the illegal timber trade. In June, Prime Minister Thongsing Thammavong issued an order to strengthen measures against illegal logging and timber smuggling.
But EIA says despite the laws, the situation is "chaotic and prone to corruption."
Forest cover in Laos has declined sharply over recent decades from over 60 percent in the 1960s to around 40 percent today.
Group Links Vietnam Military to Illegal Logging in LaosThursday, July 28th, 2011 at 10:30 am UTCPosted 55 seconds ago A London-based environmental group accuses the Vietnamese military of playing a key role in the illicit lumber trade between Vietnam and Laos.
The Environmental Investigation Agency says in a report Thursday that its agents posed as buyers of illegal timber during undercover operations in 2010 and 2011. It says the group discovered that one of the biggest loggers in Laos, the Vietnamese Company of Economic Cooperation, is controlled by the Vietnamese military.
The group said it learned that the company has been engaged in the logging business in Laos for more than 20 years and that it sources most of its logs from dam clearance sites.
Laos has some of the last intact tropical forests in the Mekong region, but EIA says a ban on the export of raw timber from the country is poorly enforced and widely flouted.
The Environmental Investigation Agency says on its website that it has been working undercover since 1984 to
expose international environmental crime such as the illegal trade in wildlife and illegal logging.
The group received an award in 2007 from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, which said the EIA has earned a reputation for highly effective and successful campaigning.