The Phnom Penh Post

Officials linked to logging

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O’huch – allegedly received a total of $170,000 from a Vietnamese trader named Uk Nhor. The officials allegedly shared the bounty with several others, including $10,000 to Provincial Military Police Commander Sak Sarang, $6,000 to a Forestry Administra­tion official named only as “Nak”, and $22,500 to the O’huch border police chief Leang Phearoth.

The letter pins Rattanak, Phearoth, Khaimeng, Songhour and the Vietnamese trader as the “mastermind­s of the collusion to log, collect and haul the [timber] to Vietnam”.

In all, 11 National Police officials are implicated by the letter, which requests the interior minister to authorise court charges against Rattanak and Phearoth. For the nine others, administra­tive disciplina­ry actions, such as reassignme­nt or “education”, is recommende­d. Interior Ministry and National Police spokesmen contacted yesterday were unavailabl­e or declined to comment.

Jurisdicti­on for officials involved who are not in the National Police force falls outside of the Savoeun’s purview.

Military police spokesman Eng Hy and RCAF Border Regiment 103 Commander Yin Chathy, the superior of some of those implicated, said investigat­ions are ongoing.

According to Hy, “officials from different institutio­ns are looking into it”.

Vong Sokserey, the provincial Forestry Administra­tion director, claimed ignorance of the allegation­s and declined to comment.

Meanwhile, Sak Sarang, the Mondulkiri provincial military police commander accused of taking $10,000 in bribes, denied the allegation or having any connection to any of the other officials named.

“I have never met those people. In short, I do not know them. I have never even seen their faces,” he said, before hanging up on a reporter. Among those implicated are Sarang’s older brother and Keo Seima District Military Police Commander Sak Sarun.

Preap Kol, the director of Transparen­cy Internatio­nal Cambodia, noted that the AntiCorrup­tion Unit should be involved in further investigat­ions, adding that the corruption apparent in the letter suggests the “indicated briberies are a tip of the iceberg if compared to the records of timber trade by the Vietnamese authoritie­s”.

According to a report on Vietnamese customs data published last year, the combined value of timber legally imported by Vietnam from Cambodia rose from $45.7 million in 2013 to $379 million in 2015.

This latest crackdown on allegedly corrupt officials falls under a broader effort by the anti-logging commission created last year on the orders of prime minister Hun Sen. The task force claimed in April to have put an end to logging in the eastern provinces, though when Post reporters investigat­ed in June, they found rampant logging, collusion by authoritie­s and witnessed bribery at border checkpoint­s.

Sok Rotha, provincial coordinato­r for rights group Adhoc, said the group will insist that the officials named see their day in court.

“If there is no action against the perpetrato­rs, it will create more impunity.”

 ?? SUPPLIED ?? Timber trucks driven by Vietnamese nationals that were seized in Mondulkiri province last month. The case prompted an investigat­ion into possible collusion between authoritie­s and illegal loggers.
SUPPLIED Timber trucks driven by Vietnamese nationals that were seized in Mondulkiri province last month. The case prompted an investigat­ion into possible collusion between authoritie­s and illegal loggers.

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