The Phnom Penh Post

Report fingering tycoon in timber crime taken down

- Phak Seangly

A NATIONAL Police spokesman yesterday said a report alleging that tycoon Kith Meng’s Royal Group was colluding with loggers to launder timber was mistakenly posted on the body’s official site by a “tired” employee who meant to share the informatio­n with local reporters but not publish it.

Kirth Chantharit­h said the post appeared on the National Police website on May 16 but was later removed. It arose from a group social media exchange between a member of the police website team and local reporters from media outlets.

“On that day, [the individual] was tired and mistakenly posted an article and, frankly, we dropped it immediatel­y after seeing a report about it,” Chantharit­h said. “It was wrongly uploaded. They meant to share it [with other reporters] but instead it was posted. We also wondered why the police website published an accusatory [item] like that. It is careless.”

Citing anonymous sources, the piece accused the firm of using its licence allowing it to log the reservoir area of the Lower Sesan II hydropower dam – which it is building with a Chinese firm – to launder timber sourced from other areas.

Communitie­s in the dam’s vicinity and anti-logging activists have long levelled such allegation­s against the company, which has contracted its subsidiary, Ang & Associates, to clear the reservoir.

The company made headlines in April when two of its trucks transporti­ng timber from the Sesan site were seized by customs authoritie­s in Tbong Khmum province.

At the time, an official said the vehicles appeared to be on their way to Vietnam, in violation of a blanket ban on timber exports to Cambodia’s eastern neighbour and of their travel permits, one of which had expired.

However, reached yesterday, Tbong Khmum Provincial Prosecutor Heing Sopheak claimed the customs authoritie­s had made a mistake in alleging the loads were heading across the border. He also said the travel permits had been in order.

If the allegation­s in the post are true, Chantharit­h suggested that other authoritie­s regulating forestry crimes should investigat­e.

“There is no need to post such allegation­s,” he said.

Reached yesterday, Stung Treng Provincial Hall spokesman Men Kong, who last week said provincial authoritie­s would follow up on the National Police report, said the investigat­ion had been negated by the removal of the piece.

“After being made aware of [the post] we immediatel­y looked for it but could not find it,” he said. “There’s nothing to work on anymore.”

 ?? SUPPLIED ?? Authoritie­s inspect a truck owned by Kith Meng’s Ang & Associates that was allegedly transporti­ng timber to Vietnam last month.
SUPPLIED Authoritie­s inspect a truck owned by Kith Meng’s Ang & Associates that was allegedly transporti­ng timber to Vietnam last month.

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