The Phnom Penh Post

Mobile app tracks forest crimes

- Phak Seangly

THE Prey Lang Community Network (PLCN) has recorded 2,926 cases of forestry crimes in four provinces since February 2015, a report it released on Thursday said. It was based on data collected with a novel smartphone app.

PLCN members – an alliance of local communitie­s living around the forest in northern Cambodia – have patrolled Prey Lang since 2001 to document cases of illegal logging. But poor data management made reporting haphazard.

To overcome the difficulty, PLCN adopted the app in 2015 to improve data collection methods and create a centralise­d database.

The app, created by the agency Web Essentials and the University of Copenhagen, have substantia­lly streamline­d data collection since its debut.

The forest spans across Kampong Thom, Stung Treng, Kratie and Preah Vihear provinces.

“Since 2015, PLCN has systematic­ally recorded a total of 2,926 cases of illegal activities using smartphone technology,” the report said.

Most cases happened in Kampong Thom at 1,019 (34.83 per cent). It is followed by Kratie at 911 (31.13 per cent), Stung Treng at 568 (19.41 per cent) and Preah Vihear at 428 (14.63 per cent).

In August alone, PLCN recorded 33 cases of timber transporta­tion and found 36 tree stumps, 18 planks and four cleared areas.

“In August the network documented a number of forestry crimes … None of the perpetrato­rs had valid permits,” the report said.

In May 2016, the government designated 400,000ha of Prey Lang forest in the four provinces as protected wildlife sanctuarie­s under the jurisdicti­on of the Environmen­t Ministry.

PLCN member in Kampong Thom province, Hoeun Sophea, said forestry crimes have occurred unabated in Kampong Thom province as there is easy access for offenders to log and transport the timber out of the forest.

He said some officials had received bribes from timber transporte­rs.

“Some officials do not enforce the laws, especially forestry administra­tion and environmen­t officials. If laws are enforced, such crimes would not happen. They are colluding with offenders,” he said.

Sopheap said that offenders would cut the timber into smaller parts so they could conceal the contraband.

He said PLCN members use more than 40 smartphone­s to collect data.

Kampong Thom provincial envi- ronment department director Tob Kakada said while he had not seen the report, forestry crimes had actually declined in the sanctuary bordering his province thanks to the regular crackdown.

“We try to curb the crimes every day. We’ve busted more forestry crimes [than at the other provinces],” he said.

Kakada said he had always warned his rangers against accepting bribes. “We never see them taking [bribes] with our own eyes,” he said.

 ?? PLCN ?? Loggers are held over illegal felling in the Prey Lang area in the Kingdom’s north.
PLCN Loggers are held over illegal felling in the Prey Lang area in the Kingdom’s north.

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