The Phnom Penh Post

Oknha Sam Ol arrested over M’kiri illegal logging

- Soth Koemsoeun

TYCOON Soeng Sam Ol, the owner of the Master K Sun company, t wo super v isors and a driver were arrested on Tuesday for illega l logging in a crackdow n in Mondulkiri prov ince which was led by Commander Sao Sok ha, t he chief of t he National Milita r y Police.

More t han 40 vehicles t ra nspor ting i l lega l t imber were sei zed a nd a re set to be torched, Nationa l Milita r y Police spokesman Eng Hy sa id.

It is not the first time Sam Ol, who holds the honorific of oknha, has been implicated in illega l logging.

Hy told The Post on Tuesday that National Committee for Prevention and Crackdown on National Resources officia ls arrested Sam Ol and seized t he vehicles.

“Those arrested are st i l l being questioned in accordance with the law. We are searching for the others involved,” Hy said.

Vehicles used i n the crime were likely hidden in t he forest and were actively being searched for.

Hy said: “Vehicles t hat aut horities find in the forest will be destroyed t here. I would like to appeal to a ll t hose involved in forestr y crime to withdraw immediatel­y or face lega l action.”

Hem Bonarel, who commands t he Mondulkiri prov incia l Militar y Police, said he led 35 officers in a joint operation wit h the National Committee for Prevention and

Crackdown

Resources.

“We have not left the forest [as of 5pm Tuesday] as we are still searching for evidence and collecting vehicles. I cannot say any more than this.”

Pen Bonna, senior land and natural resources officer for rights group Adhoc, who previously filed more than 10 lawsuits against local authoritie­s with regard to forestry crimes, welcomed Sam Ol’s arrest.

He said it was a positive sign that those who destroyed the forest were being cracked down on.

“We hope that other oknha involved i n forestr y crimes will be arrested like Sam Ol. This paves the way for investigat­ions into ot her oknha.

“We saw that there were many [media] reports with regard to Sam Ol committing forestry crimes for many years, so he could not have been acting alone. He must have paid bribes to the relevant officials, including those at the local level.

“Everything results from systematic corruption. It is not only at the provincial level but also at the national level,” Bunna claimed.

Sam Ol was summoned by Mondulkiri Provincial Court Judge Suy Sophea to appear in October 2017 “to clarify on the logging and transporti­ng of many types of luxury timber on National in Mondulkiri province’s Keo Seyma district on January 16, 2016”.

He denied any involvemen­t with the alleged crime, which a Sokha-led committee had discovered and filed the court complaint over.

Kreung Tola, a Mondulkiri province forest activist, said Sam Ol’s company transporte­d timber to be sent for sale in Vietnam.

“He mostly cuts down trees in the Phnom Prich wildlife sanctuary and other areas. He has many means of transport, including vehicles, makeshift tractors and container trucks, to take the illegal timber to Vietnam,” Tola said.

On the Sunday before Sam Ol’s arrest, Hy, the National Military Police spokesman, announced that strict legal action would be taken against individual­s and companies involved in forestry crimes.

A request would be made to the authoritie­s to have all vehicles, such as trucks, makeshift tractors and motorcycle­s, involved with such crimes destroyed on the spot.

Early this month Minister of Agricultur­e, Forestry and Fishery Veng Sakhon sent a letter to Sao Sokha that his ministry had received informatio­n regarding illegal logging in the Kingdom’s Northeast and would investigat­e, noting that forest crimes seemed to be on the rise.

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