Vietnam is almost annexing areas of Laos to feed its own industries

 

Laos forests feeding Vietnam industry, group says

 

 

Undercover agents investigate the as yet unregulated timber trafficking between Laos and Vietnam. This descriptive video encapsulates the problems that are faced not just from straight forward timber exploitation from A to B, But also highlights the currently underexposed exportation of uncertified furniture products.

 

Click to watch video:

 

 

 

 

Crossroads from EIA on Vimeo.

 

 

 

 

BANGKOK Jul 28, 2011 - Despite an export ban, Vietnamese companies are smuggling logs from the once rich forests of Laos to feed a billion-dollar wood industry that turns timber into furniture for export to the Europe and the United States, an environmental group said on Thursday.

 

 

 

 

 

http://www.straitstimes.com/BreakingNews/SEAsia/Story/STIStory_695765.html

 

 

 

 

The London-based Environmental Investigation Agency alleged that the Vietnamese military was heavily involved in bribing Lao officials and then trafficking the timber on a massive scale to wood processing factories in neighbouring Vietnam. This was denied by the government and military.

 

Laos, with some of the last intact tropical forests in the region, in 1999 slapped a ban on the export of raw timber and says it is expanding its forest cover. But there are widespread reports of rampant logging, often associated with the country's mushrooming dam projects and agricultural plantations.

 

'Vietnam is almost annexing areas of Laos to feed its own industries. The only winners in Laos are corrupt government officials and well-connected businessmen,' Julian Newman, an EIA staffer, said at a news conference. The group focuses on environmental crime worldwide.

 

Vietnamese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Nguyen Phuong Nga denied the allegations. -- AP

 

Vietnam army smuggling timber in Laos: activists

 

by Staff Writers, Bangkok (AFP) July 28, 2011

http://www.terradaily.com/reports/Vietnam_army_smuggling_timber_in_Laos_activists_999.html

 

The Vietnamese army is playing a key role in smuggling wood from the jungles of Laos, a multi-million dollar activity that threatens millions of livelihoods, a new report said Thursday.

 

Hanoi denied the claim of the London-based Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA), which said its undercover operations revealed one of the biggest loggers in Laos to be a company owned by Vietnam's military.

 

Although Laos has some of the Mekong region's last intact tropical forests, its export ban on raw timber is "routinely flouted on a massive scale" to feed "ravenous" industries in Vietnam, China and Thailand, the EIA said.

 

"What is happening here is almost displaced deforestation. Vietnam is almost annexing swathes of Laos to feed its industry," Julian Newman, campaigns director of the EIA, said at the report's launch in Bangkok.

 

The group's undercover work focused on the army-owned Vietnamese Company of Economic Cooperation (COECCO), which it said sources most of its logs from Lao dam clearance sites.

 

"Widespread" corruption among the Lao government's forestry officials has enabled the timber smuggling, with 500,000 cubic metres, worth at least 150 million dollars, crossing the Laos-Vietnam border each year, the EIA said.

 

A spokeswoman for the foreign ministry in Hanoi later denied the claims when questioned at a press conference.

 

"There is no smuggling of timber or logging from Laos by the Vietnamese army," said Nguyen Phuong Nga.

 

"All illegal logging and smuggling of timber will be strictly dealt with according to Vietnamese law."

 

Newman said it was ironic that Vietnam "recognises the need to protect its own forests while it is taking indiscriminately from next door".

 

The forests of Laos, a key source of food for its population, covered 70 percent of the land-locked country in the 1940s, dropping to 41 percent in 2002. By 2020, the figure could be as low as 30 percent, the EIA said.

 

"The governments of Vietnam and Laos urgently need to work together to stem the flow of logs and curb the over-exploitation of Laos precious forests before its too late," said Faith Doherty, head of EIA's forest campaign.

 





25/02/2012
0 Poster un commentaire

A découvrir aussi


Inscrivez-vous au blog

Soyez prévenu par email des prochaines mises à jour

Rejoignez les 15 autres membres